@string{addr-bh = {Beverly Hills}}
@string{addr-bom = {Boston, MA}}
@string{addr-cam = {Cambridge, MA}}
@string{addr-chi = {Chicago, Ill}}
@string{addr-cuk = {Cambridge, UK}}
@string{addr-eui = {San Domenico, Italy}}
@string{addr-hef = {Helsinki, Finland}}
@string{addr-lac = {Los Angeles, Ca}}
@string{addr-mwi = {Madison, WI}}
@string{addr-nbp-ca = {Newbury Park, CA}}
@string{addr-nhnh = {New Haven, CN}}
@string{addr-ny = {New York}}
@string{addr-ony = {New York, Oxford}}
@string{addr-pnj = {Princeton, NJ}}
@string{addr-pox = {Princeton and Oxford}}
@string{addr-prg = {Prague, Czech republic}}
@string{addr-sd = {San Diego, CA}}
@string{addr-sf = {San Francisco, CA}}
@string{addr-to = {Thousand Oaks, Ca.}}
@string{addr-wdc = {Washington, DC}}
@string{inst-iere = {Institute for Empirical Research in Economics, University
of Z{ü}rich}}
@string{j-aer = {American Economic Review}}
@string{j-ajs = {American Journal of Sociology}}
@string{j-apsr = {American Political Science Review}}
@string{j-arps = {Annual Review of Political Science}}
@string{j-asr = {American Sociological Review}}
@string{j-atm = {Atlantic Monthly}}
@string{j-ba = {Bulletin advokacie}}
@string{j-blr = {Boston University Law Review}}
@string{j-cae = {Cognition and Emotion}}
@string{j-com = {Commentary}}
@string{j-cwrlr = {Case Western Reserve Law Review}}
@string{j-dem = {Demography}}
@string{j-eeh = {Explorations in Economic History}}
@string{j-fa = {Foreign Affairs}}
@string{j-foc = {Focus}}
@string{j-hir = {Harvard International Review}}
@string{j-hlj = {Hastings Law Journal}}
@string{j-hlr = {Harvard Law Review}}
@string{j-jcj = {Journal of Criminal Justice}}
@string{j-jcp = {Journal of Economic Psychology}}
@string{j-jde = {Journal of Development Economics}}
@string{j-jep = {Journal of Economic Perspectives}}
@string{j-jepg = {Journal of Experimental Psychology: General}}
@string{j-jesp = {Journal of Experimental Social Psychology}}
@string{j-jls = {Journal of Legal Studies}}
@string{j-jod = {Journal of Democracy}}
@string{j-jpsp = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology}}
@string{j-jqc = {Journal of Quantitative Criminology}}
@string{j-jrc = {Journal of Research in Crime and Deliquency}}
@string{j-jrcd = {Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency}}
@string{j-lsr = {Law \& Society Review}}
@string{j-mlr = {Michigan Law Review}}
@string{j-olr = {Oregon Law Review}}
@string{j-tap = {The American Prospect}}
@string{j-tas = {Theory and Society}}
@string{j-usflr = {University of San Francisco Law Review}}
@string{matej = {Matěj Cepl}}
@string{pub-abl = {Allyn \& Bacon}}
@string{pub-ac = {Academia}}
@string{pub-ap = {Academic Press}}
@string{pub-bab = {Basic Books}}
@string{pub-bb = {Basil Blackwell}}
@string{pub-bp = {Beacon Press}}
@string{pub-coup = {Columbia University Press}}
@string{pub-cp = {Columbia Press}}
@string{pub-cup = {Cambridge University Press}}
@string{pub-dbl = {Doubleday}}
@string{pub-eui = {European University Institute/Robert Schuman Center}}
@string{pub-fop = {Foundation Press, Inc.}}
@string{pub-fp = {Free Press}}
@string{pub-hup = {Harvard University Press}}
@string{pub-ip = {Insight Press}}
@string{pub-lb = {Little Brown \& Co.}}
@string{pub-mit = {MIT Press}}
@string{pub-neup = {Northeastern University Press}}
@string{pub-ora = {O'Reilly Association}}
@string{pub-oup = {Oxford University Press}}
@string{pub-pei = {Pearson Education, Inc.}}
@string{pub-pup = {Princeton University Press}}
@string{pub-rsf = {Russell Sage Foundation}}
@string{pub-rxc = {Roxbury Publixhing Company}}
@string{pub-sag = {Sage Publications}}
@string{pub-sas = {Simon \& Schuster}}
@string{pub-sn = {Sociologicke nakladatelstvi}}
@string{pub-spv = {Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.}}
@string{pub-ucp = {University of Chicago Press}}
@string{pub-uwmirp = {University of Wisconsin--Madison, Institute for Research
on Poverty}}
@string{pub-uwp = {University of Wisconsin Press}}
@string{pub-wil = {John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd}}
@string{pub-wwnc = {W.\,W.\,Norton \& Company, Inc.}}
@string{pub-yup = {Yale University Press}}
@string{pub_cp = {Columbia Press}}
@string{pubcp = {Columbia Press}}

@incollection{blumstein:CDA-2000-13,
  pages = {13-44},
  title = {Disaggregating the Violence Trends},
  author = {Blumstein, Alfred},
  crossref = {blumstein:CDA-2000},
}

@incollection{braithwaite:CTP-2003-316,
  author = {Braithwaite, John},
  title = {Crime, Shame, and Reintegration},
  chapter = {30},
  pages = {316-324},
  crossref = {cullen:CTP-2003},
}

@incollection{braithwaite:ECC-2001-242,
  author = {Braithwaite, John},
  title = {Reintegrative Shaming},
  chapter = {8},
  pages = {223-241},
  crossref = {paternoster:ECC-2001},
}

@incollection{buckle:-NEJ-1982-78,
  author = {Leonard G. Buckle and Suzann R. Thomas-Buckle},
  title = {Doing Unto Others: Dispute and Dispute Processing in
                   an Urban American Neighborhood},
  pages = {78--90},
  annote = {The basic premise of the article is that Neighborhood
                   Justice C[ouncil?] has to follow the already existing
                   local patterns of disputing and the values of the
                   residents. ``...[I]ts effectivness would be dependent
                   on its ability to link with the existing structure of
                   coping networks in effect building on the strengths of
                   the present system.''},
  crossref = {tomasic:NEJ-1982},
}

@incollection{coase:PSC-1960,
  author = {Ronald H. Coase},
  title = {The Problem of Social Cost},
  pages = {95--156},
  note = {First published in \emph{Journal of Law and Economics}
                   3:1-44.},
  crossref = {coase:FML-1998},
}

@incollection{coase:LFM-1998-1,
  author = {Ronald H. Coase},
  title = {The Nature of the Firm},
  pages = {1--99},
  note = {First published in \emph{Economica} 6 (1937):386-405.},
  crossref = {coase:FML-1998},
}

@incollection{eck:CDA-2000-207,
  chapter = {7},
  pages = {207-265},
  title = {Have Changes in Policing Reduced Violent Crime?},
  author = {Eck, John E. and Maguire, Edward R.},
  crossref = {blumstein:CDA-2000},
}

@incollection{fogel:FNI-1997-13,
  author = {Robert William Fogel},
  title = {Douglass {C}. {N}orth and Economic Theory},
  pages = {13--28},
  crossref = {drobak:FNI-1997},
}

@incollection{fox:CDA-2000-288,
  chapter = {9},
  pages = {288-317},
  title = {Demographics and {U}.{S}. {H}omicide},
  author = {James Alan Fox},
  crossref = {blumstein:CDA-2000},
}

@incollection{gambetta:TMB-1988-215,
  pages = {215--237},
  title = {Can We Trust Trust?},
  author = {Diego Gambetta},
  crossref = {gambetta:TMB-1988},
}

@incollection{gambettaa:TMB-1988-158,
  pages = {158--175},
  title = {Mafia: the Price of Distrust},
  author = {Diego Gambetta},
  annote = {Describes mechanics of the Mafia's survival---fear,
                   enhancement of economics interests of all actors,
                   cultural etc. reasons that cooperation with mafia is
                   good, and relation of kin or friendship; he then
                   analyzes especially the first two ones.},
  crossref = {gambetta:TMB-1988},
}

@incollection{gellner:TMB-1988-142,
  pages = {142--157},
  title = {Trust, Cohesion, and the Social Order},
  author = {Ernest Gellner},
  crossref = {gambetta:TMB-1988},
}

@incollection{greif:FNI-1997-57,
  author = {Avner Greif},
  title = {On the Interrelations and Economic Implications of
                   Economic, Social, Political, and Normative Factors:
                   Reflections from Two Late Medieval Societies},
  chapter = {IV.},
  pages = {57--94},
  crossref = {drobak:FNI-1997},
}

@incollection{hart:TMB-1988-176,
  pages = {176--193},
  title = {Kinship, Contract, and Trust: The Economic
                   Organization of Migrants in an African City Slum},
  author = {Keith Hart},
  crossref = {gambetta:TMB-1988},
}

@incollection{kahan:MSO-2003,
  title = {The Logic of Reciprocity: Trust, Collective Action,
                   and Law},
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  crossref = {gintis:MSO-2005},
}

@incollection{luhman:TMB-1988-94,
  pages = {94--107},
  title = {Familiarity, Confidence, Trust: Problems and
                   Alternatives},
  author = {Niklas Luhmann},
  annote = {Highly philosophical, trying to define basic
                   phenomena, makes distinction between familiarity --
                   area where danger is limited by the familiarity (mainly
                   provided by religion), confidence -- resolution of
                   unfamiliar danger by relaying on outside luck, w/o
                   intentional decision, and trust -- decision in the
                   situation of unfamiliar danger, by choosing one choice
                   in the situation of unsufficient informations; he
                   ellaborates on the idea, that with growing knowledge,
                   we are escaping unfamilliarity, but we have to fight
                   more lack of confidence and trust.},
  crossref = {gambetta:TMB-1988},
}

@incollection{matsueda:CTP-2003-325,
  author = {Matsueda, Ross L.},
  title = {Reflected Appraisals, Parental Labelling, and Delinquency},
  chapter = {29},
  pages = {308-315},
  crossref = {cullen:CTP-2003},
}

@incollection{matsueda:ECC-2001-223,
  author = {Matsueda, Ross L.},
  title = {Labelling Theory: Historical Roots, Implications, and Recent
Developments},
  chapter = {8},
  pages = {223-241},
  crossref = {paternoster:ECC-2001},
}

@incollection{merry:NEJ-1982-172,
  author = {Sally Engle Merry},
  title = {Defining ``Success'' in the Neighborhood Justice
                   Movement},
  pages = {172--192},
  annote = {Every evaluation is skewed towards elimination of
                   cases from court dockets, and there is much less
                   interest in the quality of justice. Mediation tends to
                   die out even in primitive societies with modernization.
                   There is a need for long-time views with wider
                   perspectives.},
  crossref = {tomasic:NEJ-1982},
}

@inbook{mozny:ZVC-1998-921,
  chapter = {4},
  pages = {92--112},
  title = {Ceska rodina, snatkovy trh a reprodukcni klima [Czech
                   family, marriage market and reproductive clima]},
  author = {Ivo Mozny and Ladislav Rabusic},
  crossref = {vecernik:ZVC-1998},
}

@incollection{north:FNI-1997-3,
  author = {Douglass C. North},
  title = {Prologue},
  pages = {3--12},
  note = {Also published as \cite{north:LNL-1995-1}},
  crossref = {drobak:FNI-1997},
}

@incollection{north:LNL-1995-1,
  author = {Douglass C. North},
  title = {My Evolution as an Economist},
  crossref = {breit:LNL-1995},
}

@incollection{pagden:TMB-1988-127,
  pages = {127--141},
  title = {Destruction of Trust and its Economic Consequences in
                   the Case of Eighteen-century Naples},
  author = {Anthony Pagden},
  annote = {By substituting original trust by honour (in Spanish
                   meaning of the word), Spaniards in Baroque Naples
                   destroyed fede publica (public trust) and supported
                   their authocracy. Tools used consisted from creating
                   new artificial nobility, supporting division between
                   classes and sexes (woman was to be worshipped but not
                   have been the best friend to talk with). Keyword is
                   replacement of the rule of law and impartial justice by
                   the different statuses and honour and obssesive
                   litigation with slow and unpredictable justice.
                   Distinguishes la fede privata (trust in family) and la
                   fede publica (public trust), where in the good res
                   publica the former must be subordinated to latter.
                   Subordinates Protestant ethic of Calvinisim as only one
                   of the kind of republicans ethic, and thus explains why
                   capitalsm blossomed not only in Puritan countries but
                   also in the Catholic Florenc and Aragonese Naples. He
                   emphasizes as the key elements of such republican ethic
                   trust to out-groups.},
  crossref = {gambetta:TMB-1988},
}

@incollection{raymond:TRH-1999,
  author = {Eric S. Raymond},
  title = {The Revenge of Hackers},
  crossref = {oreilly:OSV-1999},
}

@incollection{sherman:CTP-2003-325,
  author = {Sherman, Lawrence W.},
  title = {Defiance Theory},
  chapter = {31},
  pages = {325-332},
  crossref = {cullen:CTP-2003},
}

@incollection{torvalds:TLE-1999,
  author = {Linus Torvalds},
  title = {The Linux Edge},
  crossref = {oreilly:OSV-1999},
}

@incollection{wintemute:CDA-2000-288,
  chapter = {3},
  pages = {45-96},
  title = {Guns and Gun Violence},
  author = {Wintemute, Garen},
  crossref = {blumstein:CDA-2000},
}

@incollection{frankl:PAE-1967-19,
  pages = {19--35},
  title = {Existential Dynamics and Neurotic Escapism},
  note = {Previously published as \cite{frankl:JEP-1963-27}},
  crossref = {frankl:PAE-1967},
}

@inproceedings{cepl:KEO1999-VII,
  author = matej,
  title = {Ochrana programatorske prace z hlediska autorskeho
                   prava},
  booktitle = {Konference EurOpen.CZ '99},
  year = {1999},
  editor = {Jiri Felbab},
  pages = {no. VII},
  address = {Zamek Nectiny u Plzne},
  month = nov,
  organization = {EurOpen.CZ},
  day = {8},
  keywords = {copyright, a programmer as an employee, Czech law, EurOpen.CZ
'99},
  annote = {Obecny prehled ochrany autorskeho prava pro
                   programatory, kteri vytvareji programy v ramci sve
                   prace.},
  isbn = {80-902715-0-2},
  url = {http://www.ceplovi.cz/matej},
}

@unpublished{cepl:LSC-2001,
  author = matej,
  title = {Looking for social capital in the {C}zech republic},
  note = {Sample paper for application to PhD programs},
  month = dec,
  year = {2000},
  day = {28},
  url = {http://www.ceplovi.cz/matej/},
}

@misc{cepl:PRD-1998,
  author = matej,
  title = {Pravni rozbor dvou volnych licenci podle ceskeho prava},
  year = {1998-9},
  note = {Puvodne prednaska pro CZLUG -- cesky, ted podstatne
                   pepracovao v anglicke verzi},
  keywords = {GPL, OP/L, free software, enforceability, author's
     compensation, on-line contracts, damage compensation},
  annote = {V tomto pravnim rozboru se snazim posoudit platnost
                   dvou volnych licenci. Predevsim je cilem zjistit, zdali
                   dokumenty a programy uverejnene s odkazem na tyto
                   licence budou volne siritelne i v Ceske republice.
                   Dochazim k tomu, ze tyto licence jsou nekompatibilni
                   jak s ceskym autorskym pravem, tak s obecnymi pravidly
                   uzavirani smluv. Soucasti je i shrnuti
                   nejd\r{u}lezitejsich d\r{u}sledk\r{u} tohoto zjisteni.},
}

@article{cepl:Baddr-1998-40,
  author = matej,
  title = {{K} pojmu outsourcingu a zakladnim problem\r{u}m jeho
                   smluvni upravy},
  journal = j-ba,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {9},
  pages = {40--47},
  address = {Praha},
}

@unpublished{cepl:MCE-1997,
  author = matej,
  title = {Making Contract by Electronic Data Interchange Over},
  note = {Term paper for University of San Francisco Law School;
                   also available on \url{www.ceplovi.cz/matej/}},
  month = may,
  year = {1997},
}

@unpublished{cepl:PBC-1996,
  author = matej,
  title = {Public beneficiary companies in the {C}zech republic},
  note = {Term paper for University of San Francisco Law School},
  month = nov,
  year = {1996},
  url = {http://www.ceplovi.cz/matej/},
}

@phdthesis{cepl:UMC-1994,
  author = matej,
  title = {Uzavirani manzelstvi cirkevni cestou},
  school = {Charles University Law School},
  year = {1994},
  address = addr-prg
}

@misc{clark:REG-1998,
  authorx = {Isaac (irclark<at>latveria.castledoom.org)},
  author = {Isaac Clark},
  title = {Re: Enforceability of {GPL} (Was: Re: Interix)},
  howpublished = {Posted in Usenet newsgroup \url{misc.int-property}},
  month = nov # { 27},
  year = {1998},
  annote = {Proposes, that it does not matter too much, whether
                   GPL is enforceable or not, because if it is not, than
                   user is restricted in wrongdoing by applicable general
                   provisions of law.},
  url = {http://www.deja.com/getdoc.xp?AN=416114459},
}

@misc{abreu:ESR-2001,
  author = {Dilip Abreu and Rajiv Sethi},
  title = {Evolutionary Stability in a Reputational Model of
                   Bargaining},
  institution = {Princeton University and Barnard College, Columbia
                   University},
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=260652},
}

@misc{adler:SCG-1999,
  author = {Paul S. Adler and Kwon Seok-woo},
  title = {Social Capital: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.},
  month = aug,
  year = {1999},
  note = {Draft in progress},
  day = {14},
  abstract = {A growing number of sociologists, political scientists,
     economists, and organizational
     theorists have invoked the concept of social capital in their search for
     answers to a broadening range of questions confronting their own
     fields. Seeking to clarify and enhance the utility of the concept for
     organizational theory, this paper synthesizes the theoretical research
     undertaken in these various disciplines and develops a common conceptual
     framework that identifies the sources, benefits, and risks of social
     capital.},
}

@book{aldenderger:CAN-1984,
  title = {Cluster analysis},
  publisher = pub-sag,
  year = {1984},
  author = {Aldenderfer, Mark S. and Blashfield, Roger K.},
  number = {07-044},
  series = {Sage university papers series. Quantitative
                   applications in the social sciences},
  address = addr-nbp-ca,
}

@book{almond:CC-1963,
  title = {Civic Culture},
  publisher = pub-lb,
  year = {1963},
  author = {Almond and Verba},
  address = addr-bom,
  lccn = {JA74.A452 DEWEY},
}

@article{arndt:JEP-2002-307,
  author = {Jamie Arndt and Jeff Greenberg and Alison Cook},
  title = {Mortality Salience and the Spreading Activation of
                   Worldview-Relevant Constructs: Exploring the Cognitive
                   Architecture of Terror Management},
  journal = j-jepg,
  year = {2002},
  volume = {131},
  number = {3},
  pages = {307--324},
  note = {2BREAD},
}

@article{arndt:JPSP-2002-26,
  author = {Jamie Arndt and Jeff Greenberg and Jeff Schmiel and
                   Tom Pyszczynski},
  title = {To Belong or Not to Belong: That Is the Question:
                   Terror Management and Identification With Gender and
                   Ethnicity},
  journal = j-jpsp,
  year = {2002},
  volume = {83},
  number = {1},
  pages = {26--43},
}

@book{augustin:COG-1890,
  title = {St. Augustin's City of God and Christian Doctrine},
  publisher = {The Christian Literature Publishing Co.},
  year = {1890},
  author = {Aurelius, Augustinus},
  address = addr-ny,
  note = {Translated by Philip Schaff},
  lccn = {BR60},
  annote = {cite about hate of sin and love to sinner is on
                   http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf102.iv.XIV.6.html},
  url = {http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf102.about.html},
}

@book{baker:ASS-2000,
  title = {Achieving Success Through Social Capital: Tapping the
                   Hidden Resources in Your Personal and Business Networks},
  publisher = {Jossey-Bass},
  year = {2000},
  author = {Wayne Baker},
  address = addr-sf,
  edition = {First},
  key = {business networks, social networks, human capital},
  annote = {Social capital is in the whole book basically
                   identified with the network capital -- efficiency
                   achieved in searching for suppliers, customers,
                   employ(er/ee)s, and information through networks. There
                   are some comments on importancy of long term
                   investments in networks -- ,,If you want to go north,
                   head south.`` (old Zen saying). 22: Anyone who tries to
                   pursue happiness directly will fail \& be unhappy.
                   Happiness cannot be pursued, it \emph{en}sues from the
                   pursuit of worthwile, meaningful aktivity. Social
                   capital is the by-product, sometimes a very deliberate
                   and conscious by-product of the meaningful activities.
                   (commenting on Viktor Frank: Man's Search for Meaning)
                   The book contains a simple example of the personal
                   network measurement (size, density, quality). The book
                   is heavily oriented on personal growth especially for
                   businessmen and on organizational changes in
                   organizations (sometimes in the big details).},
}

@book{banfield:MBB-1958,
  title = {The Moral Basis of a Backward Society},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1958},
  author = {Edward C. Banfield},
  lccn = {HN475.B215},
  annote = {see archiv/2001/clanky/putnam/banfield_MBB-1958.txt},
}

@article{barnett:JCJ-1980-379,
  author = {Arnold Barnett and Ellen Essenfeld and Daniel J.
                   Kleitman},
  title = {Urban {H}omicide: {S}ome {R}ecent {D}evelopments},
  journal = j-jcj,
  year = {1980},
  volume = {8},
  pages = {379-385},
}

@article{barnett:JCJ-1975-85,
  author = {Arnold Barnett and Daniel J. Kleitman and Richard C.
                   Larson},
  title = {On {U}rban {H}omicide: {A} {S}tatistical {A}nalysis},
  journal = j-jcj,
  year = {1975},
  volume = {3},
  pages = {85-110},
}

@article{barnett:JQC-1989-83,
  author = {Arnold Barnett and Elliot Schwartz},
  title = {Urban {H}omicide: {S}till the {S}ame},
  journal = j-jqc,
  year = {1989},
  volume = {5},
  number = {1},
  pages = {83-100},
}

@book{baumgartner:MOS-1988,
  title = {Moral Order of a Suburb},
  publisher = pub-oup,
  year = {1988},
  author = {M[ary] P[at] Baumgartner},
  address = addr-ony,
  lccn = {HT351.B38},
  isbn = {0-19-505413-X},
}

@book{becker:MIR-1956,
  title = {Man in reciprocity; introductory lectures on culture,
                   society, and personality},
  publisher = {Praeger},
  year = {1956},
  author = {Howard Paul Becker},
  address = {New York},
  lccn = {HM101 .B42},
}

@book{becker:REC-1986,
  title = {Reciprocity},
  publisher = {Routledge \& Kegan Paul},
  year = {1986},
  author = {Lawrence C. Becker},
  address = {London, Boston},
  lccn = {BJ1012 .B422},
  annote = {2BFINISHED Heavy duty moral philosophy -- definition
                   of morality, etc. Interesting in his understanding of
                   reciprocity as one of the sources of morality (not the
                   only one!), but not directly on my path.},
}

@article{benkler:YLJ-2003,
  author = {Yochai Benkler},
  title = {Coase's Penguin, or, Linux and the Nature of the Firm},
  journal = {Yale Law Journal},
  year = {2003},
  volume = {112},
}

@book{bernstein:RSP-1978,
  title = {The Restructuring of Social and Political Theory},
  publisher = {University of Pennsylvania Press},
  year = {1978},
  author = {Richard J. Bernstein},
  lccn = {H61.B472},
  isbn = {0-8122-7742-2},
}

@techreport{berrien:SWF-1999,
  author = {Jenny Berrien and Christopher Winship},
  title = {Should We Have Faith in the Churches? {T}he
                   {T}en-{P}oint {C}oalition's Effect on {B}oston's Youth
                   Violence},
  institution = {Harvard University},
  year = {1999},
  month = jul,
  url = {http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/soc/faculty/winship/winshipp1.pdf},
}

@techreport{bewley:FRW-2002-1383,
  author = {Truman Bewley},
  title = {Fairness, Reciprocity, and Wage Rigidity},
  institution = {Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics at Yale
                   University},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Discussion Paper},
  number = {1383},
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=348140},
}

@book{blumer:SIP-1969,
  title = {Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method},
  publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc.},
  year = {1969},
  author = {Blumer, Herbert},
  address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey},
  edition = {First},
}

@article{blundo:JCP-1999-2-11,
  author = {Robert G. Blundo and Christopher Mele and Rhonda
                   Hairston and Josephine Watson},
  title = {The Internet and Demystifying Power Differentials: {A}
                   Few Women On-Line and the Housing Authority},
  journal = {Journal of Commmunity Practice},
  year = {1999},
  volume = {6},
  number = {2},
  pages = {11--26},
  abstract = {Beginning in 1995, a group of African American women residents of
a
     45-year-old public housing project in Wilmnington, NC, struggled with the
     housing authority to participate in the revitalization of that project.
     Examined here is the emergence of a ``critical consciousness`` \&
     action on the part of these women as a consequence of their going
     online with their own Internet home page. Also considered is the
     historical \& social context of their relationship with the local
     community \& the housing authority, as well as the women's ultimate
     challenge to the housing authority's sense of ``exclusive'' possession \&
     use of information \& data. 16 References. Adapted from the source
     document.},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@misc{boix:MSC-1995,
  author = {Carles Boix and Daniel Posner},
  title = {Making Social Capital Work: {A} Review of {R}obert
                   {P}utnam's {M}aking Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in
                   Modern Italy},
  year = {1995},
  url = {http://www.wcfia.harvard.edu/rsrchpapsum.asp?ID=45},
}

@techreport{boix:MSC-1996-96-4,
  author = {Carles Boix and Daniel N. Posner},
  title = {Making Social Capital Work: {A} Review of Robert
                   Putnam's Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in
                   Modern Italy},
  institution = {The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs,
                   Harvard University},
  year = {1996},
  type = {Paper},
  number = {96-4},
  address = addr-cam,
  month = jun,
  url = {http://www.wcfia.harvard.edu/papers/96-04.pdf},
}

@book{lebon:TCR-1896,
  title = {The Crowd: {A} Study of the Popular Mind},
  publisher = {Transaction Publishing},
  year = {1896/1995},
  author = {Gustav Le Bon},
  address = {New Brunswick, NJ},
  lccn = {HM281.L53},
}

@book{boszormenyi:ILR-1973,
  title = {Invisible loyalties: reciprocity in intergenerational
                   family therapy},
  publisher = {Brunner/Mazel},
  year = {1984 [1973]},
  author = {Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy and Geraldine M. Spark},
  address = {New York},
  lccn = {RC488.5 .B65},
  annote = {2BREAD Texbook of family psychotherapy; a lot of
                   experience \& qualitative.},
}

@article{bowles:FOC-1999-3-6,
  author = {Samuel Bowles},
  title = {``Social capital'' and community governance},
  journal = j-foc,
  year = {1999},
  volume = {20},
  number = {3},
  pages = {6--10},
  month = {Fall},
  issn = {0195-5705},
  publisher = pub-uwmirp,
}

@article{bowles:TEJ-2002-F419,
  author = {Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis},
  title = {Social Capital and Community Governance},
  journal = {The Economic Journal},
  year = {2002},
  volume = {112},
  pages = {F419--F436},
}

@article{bowles:NJP-2000-33,
  author = {Samule Bowles and Herbert Gintis},
  title = {Reciprocity, Self-Interest and the Welfare State},
  journal = {Nordic Journal of Political Economy},
  year = {2000},
  volume = {26},
  pages = {33--53},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@article{braga:JRC-2001-195,
  author = {Braga, Anthony A. and Kennedy, David M. and Waring,
            Elin J. and Piehl, Anne Morrison},
  title = {Problem Oriented Policing, Deterrence, and Youth
           Violence: An Evaluation of {B}oston's {O}peration
           {C}easefire},
  journal = j-jrcd,
  year = {2001},
  volume = {38},
  number = {3},
  pages = {195-225},
  month = aug,
}

@book{braithwaite:CSR-1989,
  title = {Crime, Shame, and Reintegration},
  publisher = pub-cup,
  year = {1989},
  author = {Braithwaite, John},
  address = {Melbourne, Australia},
}

@misc{brandts:HVC-1998,
  author = {J. Brandts and G. Charness},
  title = {Hot versus Cold: Sequential Responses and Preference
                   Stability in Experimental Games},
  year = {1998},
  note = {Discussion paper quoted in \cite{fehr:ISA-2000-59}.},
  annote = {reports evidence indicating that the elicitation of
                   contingent responses does not induce different
                   behaviors.},
  organization = {Univesidad Autonoma de Barcelona},
}

@unpublished{brooks:HOH-1999,
  author = {Richard R. W. Brooks},
  title = {Hold-Outs and Holymen in Bronzeville: Race, Religion
                   and Development on Chicago's South Side},
  note = {unpublished manuscript, on file with Dan M. Kahan},
  month = may,
  year = {1999},
  day = {4},
  annote = {2BREAD Kahan's note: ``My analysis here focuses on the
                   potentially constructive role of the Black church in
                   combating crime in African American communities. It is
                   likely, however, that similar police-church
                   collaborations would be beneficial in other minority
                   communities, including Latino/a ones, in which the
                   state enjoys less legitimacy than religious
                   institutions.''},
}

@misc{brown:TPS-1998,
  author = {Thomas Ford Brown},
  title = {Theoretical Perspectives on Social Capital},
  year = {last cite is 1998---there is not exact date on the
                   page itself},
  note = {published on \url{}, author is probably somewhere on
                   John Hopkins University},
}

@article{bumpass:DEM-1989-615,
  author = {Larry L. Bumpass and James A. Sweet},
  title = {National Estimates of Cohabitation},
  journal = j-dem,
  year = {1989},
  volume = {26},
  number = {4},
  pages = {615--625},
  abstract = {Data from the 1987-1988 National Survey of
     Families and Households are used to provide national estimates of
     cohabitation trends and levels. The rapid increase since around 1970 is
     documented over both birth cohorts and marriage cohorts. Almost half
     of the persons in their early 30s and half of the recently married
     have cohabited. Changes in the proportion ever married are compared
     with changes in the proportion who have either married or cohabited.
     Much of the decline in marriage has been offset by increased living
     together without being married. The stability of unions of various types
     is compared. Cohabitations end very quickly in either marriage or
     disruption. About 60 percent of all first cohabitations result in marriage.
     Cohabiting unions and marriages preceded by cohabitation are much more
     likely to break up than are unions initiated by marriage. Multivariate
     analysis reveals higher rates of cohabitation among women, whites,
     persons who did not complete high school, and those from families who
     received welfare or who lived in a single-parent family while growing
     up.},
  annote = {CITATIONS: 620: see \url{file:../fukuyama/splits.htm}
                   621: We might expect that the termination of less
                   propitious matches before marriage and the later age at
                   marriage associated with cohabitation would lead to
                   greater martial stability for those who cohabit and
                   marry. On the contrary, the proportion separating or
                   divorcing within 10 years is a third higher among those
                   who lived together before marriage than among those who
                   did not (36 vs. 27 percent).},
}

@misc{BOC:C2000-2001,
  author = {U. S. Census Bureau},
  title = {Demographic characteristics of the cities with more
                   than 100,000 population},
  month = {20 } # apr,
  year = {2004},
  note = {Generated by Matej Cepl using Custom Table from
                   American Factfinder},
  url = {http://factfinder.census.gov/},
}

@article{campbell:LSR-1968-33,
  author = {Donald T. Campbell and H. Laurence Ross},
  title = {The {C}onnecticut {C}rackdown on {S}peeding: {T}ime
                   {S}eries {D}ata in {Q}uasi-{E}xperimental {A}nalysis},
  journal = j-lsr,
  year = {1968},
  volume = {3},
  number = {1},
  pages = {33-53},
}

@book{carter:CIC-1979,
  title = {The Criminal's Image of the City},
  publisher = {Pergamon Press},
  year = {1979},
  author = {Carter, Ronald L. and Hill, Kim Q.},
  series = {Pergamon Policy Studies},
  address = {New York, Oxford, Toronto, Sydney, Frankfurt, Paris},
  lccn = {HV6080 C39},
  annote = {Heavy duty statistics and GIS analysis for working
                   with relation between crime in different areas of the
                   city.},
  isbn = {0-08-024633-8},
}

@article{cason:JMP-1998,
  author = {T. Cason and V. Mui},
  title = {Social Influence in the Sequential Dictator Game},
  journal = {Journal of Mathematical Psychology},
  year = {1998},
  volume = {42},
  number = {2-3},
  pages = {248-265},
  annote = {2BREAD cited in \cite{fehr:ISA-2000-59} as
                   forthcoming.},
}

@misc{BOC:CCT-1995,
  author = {{Bureau of Census}},
  title = {Census {C}ounts for {C}ities with 1990 {P}opulation
                   {G}reater than 100,000},
  month = {10 } # oct,
  year = {1995},
  url = {http://www.census.gov/population/censusdata/c1008090.txt},
}

@book{coase:FML-1998,
  publisher = pub-ucp,
  year = {1998},
  author = {Ronald H. Coase},
  address = addr-chi,
  booktitle = {The Firm, the Market, and the Law},
}

@article{coleman:AJS-1988-S95,
  author = {Coleman, James S[amuel].},
  title = {Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital},
  journal = j-ajs,
  year = {1988},
  volume = {94},
  pages = {S95--S120},
}

@book{coleman:FST-1990,
  title = {Foundations of Social Theory},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1990},
  author = {James Samuel Coleman},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {HM 24.C63},
  annote = {I haven't read it through, so there are only some
                   notes on some chapters here: Chapter V.: Basic analysis
                   of a trust relation. Need for trust is caused by the
                   assymmetries in time. The placement of trust allows an
                   action on the part of the trustee that would not have
                   been possible otherwise. If the trustee is trustworthy,
                   the person who places trust is better off than if trust
                   were not placed, whereas if the trustee is not
                   trustworthy, the trustor is worse off than if trut were
                   not placed. Sometimes, the action of placing trust
                   involves the trustor's the trustor's voluntarily
                   placing resources at the disposal of another party.
                   Each example of trust involves a time lag and a future
                   action on the pat of the trustee. Let's say, that p =
                   change of receiving gain (the probabibility that the
                   trustee is trustowrthy), L = potential loss (if trustee
                   is untrustworthy), G = potential gain (if trustee is
                   trustworthy). Then decision is: yes - if p/(1-p) > L/G
                   no - if p/(1-p) < L/G indifferent - if these equals
                   Author dispute claim of Deutsch (1962), which limits
                   trust situation just to situations, where L > G.
                   Therefore Deutsch's definition doesn not work with
                   situation of placing trust in confidence man. However,
                   every trust decision is crucially dependent on
                   informartion necessary for that decision. Therefore,
                   people who do such trust decisions regularily must
                   hoard extensive amount of information (e.g., banks).},
  isbn = {0-674-31225-2},
}

@book{comiskey:SIW-2004,
  title = {Strength in Weakness},
  year = {2004},
  author = {Comiskey, Andy},
}

@book{conklin:WCR-2003,
  title = {Why {C}rime {R}ates {F}ell},
  publisher = pub-pei,
  year = {2003},
  author = {John E. Conklin},
  address = addr-bom,
  lccn = {HV 6795 .N5 C665},
  isbn = {0-205-38157-X},
}

@book{cook:QED-1979,
  title = {Quasi-Experimentation: Design \& Analysis Issues for Field Settings},
  publisher = {Rand McNally College Publishing Company},
  year = {1979},
  author = {Cook, Thomas D. and Campbell, Donald T.},
  address = {Chicago},
  edition = {First},
}

@unpublished{cooper:FLC-1999,
  author = {David J. Cooper and Carol Kraker Stockman},
  title = {Fairness, Learning, and Constructive Preferences: An
                   Experimental Investigation},
  note = {mimeo at Case Western Reserve University},
  year = {1999},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@misc{costa:TRI-1999,
  author = {Miguel Costa-Gomes and Klaus G. Zauner},
  title = {Learning, Non-equilibrium Benefits, and Non-Pecuniary
                   Payoff Uncertainity in an Experimental Game},
  year = {1999},
  note = {mimeo at Harvard Business School},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@article{cowell:CTG-1995-74,
  author = {Cowell, Frank A.},
  title = {Cheating the Government: The Economics of Evasion},
  journal = {KYKLOS},
  year = {1995},
  volume = {48},
  pages = {3},
}

@article{alm:KYK-1995-3,
  author = {Cowell, Frank A. and Sanchez, Isabel and De Juan, Ana},
  title = {Economic and Noneconomic Factors in Tax Compliance},
  journal = {KYKLOS},
  year = {1995},
  volume = {48},
  pages = {3},
}

@book{crawley:SCS-2002,
  title = {Statistical {C}omputing: {A}n {I}ntroduction to {D}ata
                   {A}nalysis using {S}-{P}lus},
  publisher = pub-wil,
  year = {2002},
  author = {Michael J. Crawley},
  address = {Chichester, UK},
  edition = {1st},
  url = {http://www.wiley.co.uk},
}

@book{cullen:CTP-2003,
  title = {Criminological Theory: Past To Present},
  publisher = pub-rxc,
  year = {2003},
  author = {Cullen, Francis T. and Agnew, Robert},
  address = addr-lac,
  lccn = {HV6025 .C85},
  booktitle = {Criminological Theory: Past To Present},
  isbn = {1-891487-55-8},
}

@article{curtis:ASR-1992-139,
  author = {James E. Curtis and Edward G. Grabb and Douglas E.
                   Baer},
  title = {Voluntary Association Membership in Fifiteen
                   Countries: {A} Comparative Analysis},
  journal = j-asr,
  year = {1992},
  volume = {57},
  pages = {139--152},
  abstract = {We test the hypothesis, dating from the work of Weber and
     Tocqueville, that Americans are more likely to become involved in voluntary
     associations than people of other nations. Compared to previous work, we
     employ more recent data and consider more countries. We also examine
     several different measures of membership levels; all memberships versus
     working memberships as well as membership including and excluding
     church or union memberships. Cross-national differences are examined
     before and after controls for education, employment status, size of
     community, gender, martial status, and age. Results show Americans
     at or near the top on most measures of membership, although this
     ranking drops singnificantly when church membership is excluded and
     drops even further when only working memberships are examined. In
     these instances, people from several countries, including Canada,
     Australia, the Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Norway, and Sweden,
     equal or surpass the membership levels of Americans, especially when
     controls are introduced. Some alternative interpretations of the
     cross-national differences in voluntary association activity are
     considered.},
  annote = {Nice example of statistics, although I am not totally
                   presuaded about exclusion of church (and union?)
                   memberships from total; although it makes their work
                   outstanding and creating fresh data, I do not see any
                   reason, why to model data in any particular direction;
                   or in other words, what's wrong with the church
                   membership; although, maybe that the problem is only in
                   unsufficient explanation of the goal of the paper --
                   paper clearly demonstrates, that the difference between
                   Americans and other countries does not lie in their
                   bigger associativity generally, but in the presence of
                   the substantial amount of religious organizations.},
}

@book{dawson:CCC-1987,
  title = {Contracts, Cases and Comments},
  publisher = pub-fop,
  year = {1987},
  author = {John P. Dawson and William Burnett Harvey and Stanley
                   D. Henderson},
  address = {615 Merrick Ave., Westbury, N.Y 11590-6607},
  edition = {6th},
}

@article{durlauf:FOC-1999-3-1,
  author = {Steven N. Durlauf},
  title = {The case ``against'' social capital},
  journal = j-foc,
  year = {1999},
  volume = {20},
  number = {3},
  pages = {1--5},
  month = {Fall},
  issn = {0195-5705},
  publisher = pub-uwmirp,
}

@article{ellickson:JLS-1998-537,
  author = {Robert C. Ellickson},
  title = {Law and Economics Discovers Social Norms},
  journal = j-jls,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {27},
  pages = {537--552},
  annote = {2BREAD - DOWNLOADED},
}

@book{ellickson:OWL-1991,
  title = {Order without law: Neighbors Settle Disputes},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1991},
  author = {Robert C. Ellickson},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {K370.E45},
}

@book{emanuel:CON-1993,
  title = {Contracts},
  publisher = {Emanuel Law Outlines, Inc.},
  year = {1993},
  author = {Steven Emanuel and Steven Knowles},
  address = {1865 Palmer Ave., Larchmont, NY 10538},
  edition = {5th},
}

@misc{epperly:ASP-1991,
  author = {Tom Epperly},
  title = {Against software patents},
  url = {http://lpf.ai.mit.edu/Patents/against-software-patents.html},
}

@techreport{esty:SFR-1998,
  author = {Daniel C. Esty and others},
  title = {State Failure Task Force Report: Phase {II} Findings},
  institution = {Central Intelligence Agency, Directorate of
                   Intelligence},
  year = {1998},
}

@techreport{esty:SFR-1995,
  author = {Daniel C. Esty and others},
  title = {Working Papers: {S}tate {F}ailure {T}ask {F}orce
                   {R}eport},
  institution = {Central Intelligence Agency, Directorate of
                   Intelligence},
  year = {1995},
}

@inbook{etzioni:LOP-1999,
  chapter = {Deciphering Encrypted Messages: A Prolonged Deadlock
                   and an Unholy War},
  pages = {75--102},
  title = {The Limits of Privacy},
  publisher = pub-bab,
  year = {1999},
  author = {Amitai Etzioni},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {JC596.2.U5E79},
  isbn = {0-465-04090-X},
}

@unpublished{gneezy:PED-1999,
  author = {Armin Falk and Urs Fischbacher},
  title = {Pay Enough or Don't Pay at All},
  note = {unpublished manuscript, on file with Dan M. Kahan},
  month = apr,
  year = {2000},
  annote = {2BREAD Finding that incentives decreased rather than
                   increased performance of individuals soliciting
                   charitable donations.},
}

@unpublished{falk:TOR-2000,
  author = {Armin Falk and Urs Fischbacher},
  title = {A Theory of Reciprocity},
  note = {unpublished manuscript, on file with Dan M. Kahan},
  year = {2000},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=203115},
}

@book{farnsworth:SFC-1992,
  title = {Selection for Contracts},
  publisher = pub-fop,
  year = {1992},
  author = {E. Allan Farnsworth and William F. Young},
  address = {615 Merrick Ave., Westbury, N.Y 11590-6607},
}

@inproceedings{fearon:AMAPSA-2002-09,
  author = {James D. Fearon},
  title = {Ethnic Structure and Cultural Diversity around the
                   World: {A} Cross-National Data Set on Ethnic Groups},
  year = {2002},
  address = {Boston, MA},
  note = {Lecture was presentation of data, which are available
                   from the Internet location of the article.},
  conference = {Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association},
  url =
{http://apsaproceedings.cup.org/Site/abstracts/012/012002FearonJame.htm},
}

@misc{fearon:WCL-2002,
  author = {James D. Fearon},
  title = {Why Do Some Civil Wars Last So Much Longer Than
                   Others?},
  month = jul,
  year = {2002},
  url = {http://www.stanford.edu/group/ethnic/workingpapers/dur3.pdf},
}

@article{fearon:APR-2003-75,
  author = {James D. Fearon and David D. Laitin},
  title = {\noop{a}Ethnicity, Insurgency and Civil War},
  journal = j-apsr,
  year = {2003},
  volume = {97},
  number = {1},
  pages = {75--90},
  note = {Data and additional tables are published as
                   \cite{fearon:ATF-2003}},
  url = {http://www.stanford.edu/group/ethnic/},
}

@misc{fearon:ATF-2003,
  author = {James D. Fearon and David D. Laitin},
  title = {\noop{b}Additional Tables for ``{E}thnicity,
                   {I}nsurgency, and {C}ivil {W}ar''},
  year = {2003},
  note = {Additional data for \cite{fearon:APR-2003-75}},
  url = {http://www.stanford.edu/group/ethnic/},
}

@misc{fearon:WSR-1999,
  author = {James D. Fearon and David D. Laitin},
  title = {Weak States, Rough Terrain, and Large-Scale Ethnic
                   Violence Since 1945},
  year = {1999},
  url = {http://www.stanford.edu/group/ethnic/workingpapers/insurg1.pdf},
}

@article{fearon:APR-1996-715,
  author = {James D. Fearon and David D. Laitin},
  title = {Explaining Interethinic Cooperation},
  journal = j-apsr,
  year = {1996},
  volume = {90},
  number = {4},
  pages = {715--735},
  month = {12},
}

@techreport{fehr:DIC-2001-CO1-3,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Simon G{ä}chter},
  title = {Do Incentive Contracts Crowd Out Voluntary
                   Cooperation?},
  institution = {Center for Law, Economics and Organization, USC Law
                   School},
  year = {2001},
  type = {Research Paper},
  number = {C01-3},
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract_id=229047},
}

@article{fehr:JEP-2000-159,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Simon G{ä}chter},
  title = {Fairness and Retaliation: The Economics of Reciprocity},
  journal = j-jep,
  year = {2000},
  volume = {14},
  number = {3},
  pages = {159-181},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@techreport{fehr:ISA-2000-59,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Simon G{ä}chter},
  title = {Informal Sanctions},
  institution = inst-iere,
  year = {1999},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {59},
  issn = {1424-0459},
  keywords = {Informal Sanctions, Social Norm, Social Capital, Strategic
     Sanction, Fairness, Reciprocity, Spitefulness},
  annote = {see

archiv/2003/skola/summer_reading-int3859/fehr_ISA-2000-59.txt},
  abstract = {Informal sanctions are a major
     determinant of a society's social capital because they are key to the
     enforcement of implicit agreements and social norms. Yet, little is
     known about the driving forces behind informal sanctions. We examine
     systematically the determinants of informal sanctions by a large number of
     experiments. Our findings show that the violation of fairness principles is
     the most important driving force of sanctions but, in addition, a
     non-negligible part of the sanctions is driven by spitefulness. We
     find surprisingly little evidence for strategic sanctions that are
     imposed to create future material benefits. Withing the class of
     fairness-driven sanctions the motive to harm those who committed unfair
     actions or who revealed unfair intentions seems most important. The
     motive to decrease unfair payoff differences also plays some role but
     it cannot explain a sizeable part of the sanctions. The motive to
     achieve a fair relative share is largely irrelevant for sanctioning
     behavior.},
  url = {http://www.unizh.ch/iew/grp/fehr/index.html},
  jel = {A13, D63, D23, C92, K42},
}

@techreport{fehr:CPP-1999-10,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Simon G{ä}chter},
  title = {Cooperation and Punishment in Public Goods Experiments},
  institution = inst-iere,
  year = {1999},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {10},
  note = {Also in American Economic Review},
  issn = {1424-0459},
  annote = {Not much more than is already in abstract, but that:
                   1) Quoting Ostrom, Walket, and Gardner (1992) -- xxx 2)
                   There must be punishing subjects to make informal
                   cooperation work.},
  url = {http://www.unizh.ch/iew/grp/fehr/index.html},
}

@article{fehr:EER-1998-845,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Simon G{ä}chter},
  title = {Reciprocity and Economics: The Economic Implications
                   of {H}omo {R}eciprocans},
  journal = {European Economic Review},
  year = {1998},
  volume = {42},
  number = {July},
  pages = {845--???},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@misc{fehr:EIC-2000,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Alexander Klein and Klaus M. Schmidt},
  title = {Endogenous Incomplete Contracts},
  year = {2000},
  note = {mimeo at University of Munich},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@techreport{fehr:TFR-2000-75,
  author = {Ernst Fehr and Klaus M. Schmidt},
  title = {Theories of Fairness and Reciprocity -- Evidence and
                   Economic Applications},
  institution = inst-iere,
  year = {2000},
  type = {Working Paper},
  issn = {1424-0459},
  volume = {75},
  annote = {see
                   2003/skola/summer_reading-int3859/fehr_TFR-2000-403.lyx},
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=255223},
}

@techreport{fershtman:TDS-1999,
  author = {Chaim Fershtman and Uri Gneezy},
  title = {Trust and Discrimination in a Segmented Society: An
                   Experimental Approach},
  institution = {University of Haifa},
  year = {1999},
  month = feb,
}

@inbook{feynman:SYJ-1985,
  chapter = {6},
  title = {Cargo Cult Science},
  publisher = pub-wwnc,
  year = {1985},
  author = {Richard Phillips Feynman and Edward Hutchings},
  address = addr-ny,
  url = {http://www.physics.brocku.ca/etc/cargo_cult_science.html},
  booktitle = {``{S}urely you're joking, {M}r. {F}eynman'':
                   {A}dventures of a curious character},
}

@article{fischler:JUH-1998-675,
  author = {Raphael Fischler},
  title = {Health, Safety, and the General Welfare: Markets,
                   Politics},
  journal = {Journal of Urban History},
  year = {1998},
  volume = {24},
  number = {6},
  pages = {675--719},
  abstract = {Examines the role of zoning in shaping the economic \&
     social landscape of urban areas, where it has functioned both as a
     reinforcer of social control \& an agent of social change. Focus is on the
     ideas \& social context behind \& operation \& impact of the 1916
     New York City zoning ordinance. The importance of the idea of class
     segregation is discussed. The origins of zoning ideas among conservative
     members of the city planning movement, who saw such segregation as an
     accceptable, desirable excerise of police power, are described, \&
     opposition to the ordinance is analyzed. It is shown how sociospatial
     differentiation helped the upper class to reinforce \& reproduce
     social distinction across generations, but also related solidarity
     among the working classes. It is concluded that the new urbanism
     movement, by analyzing social trends \& expressing them tangibly in urban
     form, is continuing the work of pioneering early-20th-century urban
     planners.},
  annote = {2BREAD -- but not too soon :-)},
}

@unpublished{fox:SHR-2004-04-08,
  author = {Fox, James},
  title = {Supplementary Homicide Reports File, 1976-2001: Codebook},
  month = {8 } # apr,
  year = {2004},
  address = {Boston, MA},
  organization = {College of Criminal Justice, Northeastern University},
}

@unpublished{fox:DWP-2004,
  author = {Fox, James Alan},
  title = {Description of Weighting Procedure Used for the Supplementary
Homicide Reports: Cumulative Victim and Offender Files, 1976-2001},
  month = {8 } # apr,
  year = {2004},
}

@book{frankl:SUM-1997,
  title = {Man's Search for Ultimate Meaning},
  publisher = {Insight Books},
  year = {1997},
  author = {Viktor E. Frankl},
  address = {New York and London},
  lccn = {RC 455.4 R4 F7},
  booktitle = {Man's Search for Ultimate Meaning},
  isbn = {0-306-45620-6},
}

@book{frankl:PAE-1967,
  title = {Psychotherapy and Existentialism: Selected Papers on
                   Logotherapy},
  publisher = pub-sas,
  year = {1967},
  author = {Viktor E. Frankl},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {RC 480.5 F73},
  booktitle = {Psychotherapy and Existentialism: Selected Papers on
                   Logotherapy},
  isbn = {671-20056-9},
}

@article{frankl:JEP-1963-27,
  author = {Viktor E. Frankl},
  title = {Existential Dynamics and Neurotic Escapism},
  journal = {Journal of Existential Psychiatry},
  year = {1963},
  volume = {4},
  pages = {27--42},
}

@book{frankl:MSM-1992,
  title = {Man's {S}earch {F}or {M}eaning: {I}ntroduction to
                   {L}ogotherapy},
  publisher = pub-bp,
  year = {1992},
  author = {Frankl, Viktor Emil},
  address = addr-bom,
  edition = {Fourth},
}

@book{friedrichs:LOL-2001,
  title = {Law in Our Lives},
  publisher = pub-rxc,
  year = {2001},
  author = {David O. Friedrichs},
  address = addr-lac,
}

@article{froomkin:ORL-1996-49,
  author = {Michael Froomkin},
  title = {The Essential Role of Trusted Third Parties in
                   Electronic Commerce},
  journal = j-olr,
  year = {1996},
  volume = {75},
  pages = {49},
  url = {http://personal.law.miami.edu/ froomkin/articles/trusted.htm},
}

@techreport{fukuyama:SCC-0074,
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  title = {Social Capital and Civil Society},
  institution = {International Monetary Fund},
  year = {2000},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {WP/00/74},
  address = addr-wdc,
  month = apr,
  class = {Z13},
  keywords = {institutions, social capital, economic policy, second generation
reforms},
  email = {ffukuyam<at>gmu.edu},
  url = {http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2000/wp0074.pdf},
}

@book{fukuyama:GDH-1999,
  title = {The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the
                   Reconstitution of Social Order},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1999},
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  address = addr-ny,
  annote = {see 2001/clanky/putnam/fukuyama_GDH-1999.txt},
  isbn = {0-684-84530-X},
}

@article{fukuyama:COM-1998-23,
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  title = {Asian Values and Asian Crisis},
  journal = j-com,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {105},
  number = {2},
  pages = {23--27},
}

@article{fukuyama:COM-1997-30,
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  title = {Is It All in the Genes},
  journal = j-com,
  year = {1997},
  pages = {30--35},
}

@article{fukuyama:HIR-1997-60,
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  title = {Falling Tide: Global Trends and {US} Civil Society},
  journal = j-hir,
  year = {1997},
  volume = {20},
  pages = {60--64},
}

@book{fukuyama:TSC-1995,
  title = {Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of
                   Prosperity},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1995},
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  address = addr-ny,
  edition = {First},
  annote = {Buckle's note on this is, that his argument is quite
                   cyclical: nice societies are nice, because they have
                   trust among members, which is originally caused by
                   their niceness.},
}

@article{fukuyama:JOD-1992-100,
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  title = {Capitalism and Democracy: The Missing Link},
  journal = j-jod,
  year = {1992},
  volume = {3},
  pages = {100--110},
  issn = {1045-5736},
}

@book{gambetta:SMB-1993,
  title = {The Sicilian Mafia: the business of private protection},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1993},
  author = {Diego Gambetta},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {HV6453.I83.M34513},
  annote = {It is a comprehensive study of the Sicilian Mafia
                   (author previously worked on the ideas about the
                   conditions enabling the Mafia to survive in
                   \cite{gambetta:TMB-1988-158}). His basic conclusion is,
                   that the Mafia is not just an criminal organization,
                   but it must be viewed as a rationally established
                   industry providing to its clients valuable services,
                   namely the service of protection, service which is by
                   its clients enjoyed and appreciated, because it is
                   desperately needed (for every society and every market
                   system) and not provided either by community or by the
                   government. From this point of view, the Mafia can be
                   analyzed using standard tools of economic analyze.
                   Author finds the western Sicilian Mafia to be an cartel
                   of relatively independent families, loosely connected
                   together by exploiting common trademark of the Mafia.
                   However, mainly due to illegal and uncontrolled
                   character of the industry of protection, there are many
                   frauds perpetuated on the customers and the structure
                   of industry is misused for actions which are severely
                   harmful to society (drug trafficking and protection of
                   criminals). The main reason for establishment of the
                   Mafia in the western Sicily, and the reason, why
                   similar organizations have not developed in the eastern
                   part of the island or in some other parts of ``amorally
                   famillistic'' Mezzogiorno see
                   \citet{banfield:MBB-1958}), author finds in the
                   conditions of the nineteenth century dissolution of the
                   feudal society. Its main elements were: absence of
                   viable trust in the society enabling a free market,
                   atomization of society to great number of many
                   independent small entrepreneurs small farmers,
                   merchants, fishermen, crafters, etc.), and supply of
                   individuals able to provide protection services
                   autonomously, to more than land owner in the time,
                   utilizing thus economies of scale. Disquieting idea is
                   that the similar conditions author finds in the
                   contemporary Russia.},
  isbn = {0-674-80741-3},
}

@book{gamm:UEX-1999,
  title = {Urban Exodus: Why the Jews Left Boston and the
                   Catholics Stayed},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1999},
  author = {Gerald Gamm},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {F75.A1G36},
  isbn = {0-674-93070-3},
}

@book{gans:UVI-1982,
  title = {The Urban Villagers},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1982},
  author = {Herbert J. Gans},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {HN80.B7G2},
  isbn = {0-02-911250-8},
}

@article{garrett:UCR-1997-17,
  author = {Elizabeth Garrett},
  title = {Perspective on Direct Democracy: Who Directs Direct
                   Democracy?},
  journal = {University of Chicago Law School Roundtable},
  year = {1997},
  volume = {4},
  pages = {17--???},
}

@book{gellner:COL-1996,
  title = {Conditions of Liberty: Civil Society and its Rivals},
  publisher = {Penguin Books},
  year = {1996},
  author = {Ernest Gellner},
  isbn = {0-14-023605-8},
}

@book{giddens:COM-1990,
  title = {The {C}onsequnces of {M}odernity},
  publisher = {Polity Press},
  year = {1990},
  author = {Anthony Giddens},
  address = addr-cuk,
}

@techreport{gintis:HSE-2000-2,
  author = {Herber Gintis},
  title = {The Individual in Economic Theory: {A} Research
                   Proposal},
  institution = {Norms And Preferences Network},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Research Paper},
  number = {2},
  url = {http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/\%7Egintis/tps_abst.html},
}

@techreport{gintis:HSE-2000-1,
  author = {Herber Gintis and Paul Romer},
  title = {The Human Side of Economic Analysis: Economic
                   Environments and the Evolution of Norms and Preferences},
  institution = {Norms And Preferences Network},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Research Paper},
  number = {1},
  url = {http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/\%7Egintis/human_abst.html},
}

@techreport{gintis:HSE-2000-3,
  author = {Herbert Gintis and Robert Boyd and Samuel Bowles and
                   Ernst Fehr},
  title = {Homo Reciprocans: {A} Research Initiative on the
                   Origins, Dimensions, and Policy Implications of
                   Reciprocal Fairness},
  institution = {Norms And Preferences Network},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Research Paper},
  number = {3},
  url = {http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/\%7Egintis/homo_abst.html},
}

@techreport{glaesar:WSC-1999,
  author = {Edward L. Glaesar and David Laibson and Jose A.
                   Scheinkman and Christine L. Soutter},
  title = {What is social capital?: The Determination of trust
                   and trustworthiness},
  institution = {National Bureau of Economic Research Inc.},
  year = {1999},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {WP 72176},
}

@article{glass:LSR-1968-55,
  author = {Glass, Gene V.},
  title = {Analysis of Data on the Connecticut Speeding Crackdown as a
Time-Series Quasi-experiment},
  journal = j-lsr,
  year = {1968},
  volume = {3},
  number = {1},
  pages = {55-76},
}

@article{gneezy:JLS-2000-1,
  author = {Uri Gneezy and Aldo Rustichini},
  title = {A Fine Is {A} Price},
  journal = j-jls,
  year = {2000},
  volume = {29},
  pages = {1--???},
  annote = {2BREAD Finding that fine increased rather than
                   decreased abuse of day care center rules by parents.},
}

@book{goffman:FOT-1981,
  title = {Forms of {T}alk},
  publisher = {University of Pennsylvania Press},
  year = {1981},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = {Philadelphia},
  lccn = {P95 .G58},
  isbn = {0812277902},
}

@book{goffman:GAD-1978,
  title = {Gender advertisements},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1978},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {HF5827 .G57 1978},
  isbn = {0674341910},
}

@book{goffman:FAE-1974,
  title = {Frame analysis: an essay on the organization of the experience},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1974},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {B105.E9 G63x},
}

@book{goffman:RIP-1971,
  title = {Relations in public : microstudies of the public order},
  publisher = {Harper \& Row},
  year = {1971},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  series = {Harper torchbooks},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {HM131 .G55},
}

@book{goffman:STI-1969,
  title = {Strategic {I}nteraction},
  publisher = {University of Pennsylvania Press},
  year = {1969},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  series = {University of Pennsylvania series in conduct and communication},
  address = {Philadelphia},
  lccn = {HM291 .G625},
  isbn = {0812230000},
}

@book{goffman:IRE-1967,
  title = {Interaction ritual : essays in face-to-face behavior},
  publisher = {Aldine Pub.},
  year = {1967},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = addr-chi,
  lccn = {HM291 .G59 1967a},
}

@book{goffman:BPP-1963,
  title = {Behavior in public places; notes on the social organization of
gatherings},
  publisher = {Free Press of Glencoe},
  year = {1963},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {HM131 .G54},
}

@book{goffman:SNM-1963,
  title = {Stigma : notes on the management of spoiled identity},
  publisher = {Simon \& Schuster},
  year = {1963},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {BF727.H3 G6},
  isbn = {0671622447},
}

@book{goffman:AES-1961,
  title = {Asylums: essays on the social situation of mental patients and other
inmates},
  publisher = pub-dbl,
  year = {1961},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {RC439 .G58},
  isbn = {0385000162},
}

@book{goffman:ETS-1961,
  title = {Encounters; two studies in the sociology of interaction},
  publisher = {Bobbs-Merrill},
  year = {1961},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  address = {Indianopolis},
  lccn = {HM291 .G58},
}

@book{goffman:PSE-1959,
  title = {The presentation of self in everyday life},
  publisher = pub-dbl,
  year = {1959},
  author = {Erving Goffman},
  series = {Anchor Books},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {HM291 .G6 1990},
}

@book{goffman:EGB-1988,
  author = {Erving Goffman},
}

@book{gordon:cla-1999,
  title = {Classification},
  publisher = {Chapman \& Hall/CRC},
  year = {1999},
  author = {Gordon, A. D.},
  number = {82},
  series = {Monographs on Statistics and Applied Probability},
  address = {Boca Raton, London, New York, Washington DC},
  edition = {2nd},
  lccn = {QA278.65.G67},
  isbn = {1-58488-013-9},
}

@article{granovetter:AJS-1985-481,
  author = {Mark [S.] Granovetter},
  title = {Economic Action and Structure: The Problem of
                   Embeddeness},
  journal = j-ajs,
  year = {1985},
  volume = {91},
  number = {3},
  pages = {481--510},
  month = nov,
}

@incollection{granovetter:SSN-1982-105,
  author = {Mark S. Granovetter},
  title = {The Strength of weak ties: {A} Network Theory
                   Revisited},
  booktitle = {Social Structure and Network Analysis},
  publisher = pub-sag,
  editor = {P. Mardsen and N. Lin},
  pages = {105--130},
  address = addr-bh,
}

@article{granovetter:AJS-1973-1360,
  author = {Mark S. Granovetter},
  title = {The Strength of Weak Ties},
  journal = j-ajs,
  year = {1973},
  volume = {78},
  number = {6},
  pages = {1360--1380},
  abstract = {Analysis of social networks is suggested as a tool for
     linking micro and macro levels of sociological theory. The procedure is
     illustrated by elaboration of the macro implications of one aspect of
     small-scale interaction: the strength of dyadic ties. It is argued
     that the degree of overlap of two individuals' friendship networks
     varies directly with the strength of their tie to one another. The
     impact of this principle on diffusion of influence and information,
     mobility opportunity, and community organization is explored. Stress is
     laid on the cohesive power of weak ties. Most network models deal,
     implicitly, with strong ties, thus confining their applicability to
     small, well-defined groups. Emphasis on weak ties lends itself to
     discussion of relations \emph{between} groups and to analysis of
     segments of social structure not easily defined in terms of primary
     groups.},
  annote = {It is stated, that according to the research, there is
                   no situation, where there would be strong ties AB and
                   AC, and \emph{none} tie BC. Therefore, no strong tie is
                   a bridge (only link between otherwise separated groups)
                   and all bridges are weak ties. Weak ties are more
                   usefull for gathering information, because the
                   information available in the strongly-tied community is
                   already known to every member. Community consisting
                   only from strong ties -- like the Italian community in
                   West Boston -- is much more fragmented and thus much
                   less able to generate united action, than the community
                   which is connected by the weak ties -- like the members
                   of the Charlestown's working-class community; the
                   difference was considered on the ability of the
                   communities to defend themselves from the urban renewal
                   in Boston. CITATIONS: 1360: I will argue in this paper,
                   that the analysis of processes in interpersonal
                   networks provides the most fruitful micro-macro bridge.
                   In one way or another, it is through these networks
                   that small-scale interaction becomes translated into
                   large-scale patterns, and that these, in turn, feed
                   back into small groups. 1361: the strength of a tie is
                   a (probably linear) combination of the amount of time,
                   the emotional intensity, the intimacy (mutual
                   confiding), and the reciprocal services which
                   characterize the tie. 1366: whatever is to be diffused
                   can reach a larger number of people, and traverse
                   greater social distance (i.e., path length), when
                   passed through weak ties rather than strong. 1376: most
                   sociometric tests ask people whom they \emph{best} or
                   would \emph{prefer} to do something with, rather than
                   with whom they actually spend time. [Thus registering
                   only strong ties and ingoring weak ones.] 1378: Linkage
                   of micro and macro level is thus no luxury but of
                   central importance to the development of sociological
                   theory. Such linkage generates paradoxes: weak ties,
                   often denounced as generative of alienation [...] are
                   here seen as indispensable to individuals'
                   opportunities and to their integration into
                   communities; strong ties, breeding local cohesion, lead
                   to overall fragmentation. Paradoxes are welcome
                   antidote to theories which explain everything too
                   neatly.},
}

@article{grasmick:JCP-1982-213,
  author = {Grasmick, Harold G. and Scott, Wilbur J.},
  title = {Tax Evasion and Mechanism of Social Control: A
                   Comparison with Grand and Petty Theft},
  journal = j-jcp,
  year = {1982},
  volume = {2},
  pages = {213-226},
}

@article{greenberg:JPSP-1990-308,
  author = {Jeff Greenberg and Tom Pyszczynski and Sheldon Solomon
                   and Dan Chatel and Abram Rosenblatt and Mitchell Veeder
                   and Shari Kirkland},
  title = {Evidence for Terror Management Theory {II}: The
                   Effects of Mortality Salience on Reactions to Those Who
                   Threaten or Bolster the Cultural Worldview},
  journal = j-jpsp,
  year = {1990},
  volume = {58},
  number = {2},
  pages = {308--318},
}

@article{greenberg:JESP-1993-229,
  author = {Jeff Greenberg and Tom Pyszczynski and Sheldon Solomon
                   and Elizabeth Pinel and Linda Simon and Krista Jordan},
  title = {Effects of Self-Esteem on Vulnerability-Denying
                   Defensive Distortions: Further Evidence of an
                   Anxiety-Buffering Function of Self-Esteem},
  journal = j-jesp,
  year = {1993},
  volume = {29},
  pages = {229--251},
}

@article{greenberg:JPSP-1992-212,
  author = {Jeff Greenberg and Linda Simon and Tom Pyszczynski and
                   Sheldon Solomon and Dan Chatel},
  title = {Terror Management and Tolerance: Does Mortality
                   Salience Always Intensify Negative Reactions to Others
                   Who Threaten One's Worldview?},
  journal = j-jpsp,
  year = {1992},
  volume = {63},
  number = {2},
  pages = {212--220},
}

@article{greenberg-JPSP-1992-913,
  author = {Jeff Greenberg and Sheldon Solomon and Tom Pyszczynski
                   and Abram Rosenblatt and John Burling and Deborah Lyon
                   and Linda Simon and Elizabeth Pinel},
  title = {Why Do People Need Self-Esteem? Converging Evidence
                   That Self-Esteem Serves an Anxiety-Buffering Function},
  journal = j-jpsp,
  year = {1992},
  volume = {63},
  number = {6},
  pages = {913--922},
  annote = {Article documents an experiment testing a hypothesis
                   explaining what is the function of self-esteem (which
                   is considered central for the mental health, but no-one
                   bothered explained what exactly it is good for).
                   According to the authors the purpose of self-esteem is
                   to provide comfort cushion against attacks of anxiety
                   and in time of perceived threats. Mildly persuasive
                   experiments are presented evidencing this hypothesis.
                   Possible implication for my work is possibility
                   (falsifiable) that decrease of self-esteem may be used
                   for increasing perception of external threats and thus
                   activating masses (which may be very well, what Hitler
                   did in 1930s' - by creating enemies trying to undermine
                   German self-esteem bolstering fear and activating
                   Germans to be willing to fight against these foggy
                   creatures threatening German self-esteem. Unfortunately
                   for us, the article is very much concerned only with
                   micro-level of personal self-esteem and it is not
                   clear, whether and how it could be translated to
                   community/national level.},
}

@misc{guiliani:FAD-2001,
  author = {Guiliani, Rudolph W.},
  title = {Farewell {A}ddress: {R}epublican {N}ew {Y}ork {C}ity
                   mayor says good-bye},
  howpublished = {Transcript of the speech on right-wing partisan
                   website},
  month = {27 } # dec,
  year = {2001},
  url = {http://www.rightturns.com/special/rg20020101.htm},
}

@article{guinnane:EEH-1994-38,
  author = {Timothy W. Guinnane},
  title = {A Failed Institutional Transplant: Raiffeisen's Credit
                   Cooperatives in Ireland, 1894-1914},
  journal = j-eeh,
  year = {1999},
  volume = {31},
  pages = {38--61},
  annote = {see
                   archiv/2000/clanky/duvera/podklady/guinnane_EEH-1994-38.txt},
}

@article{guinnane:JDE-1999-S95,
  author = {Timothy W. Guinnane and Maitreesh Ghatak},
  title = {The Economics of Lending with Joint Liability: Theory
                   and Practice},
  journal = j-jde,
  year = {1999},
  volume = {60},
  number = {1},
  pages = {195--228},
  month = oct,
  abstract = {Institutions that rely on joint liability to
     facilitate lending to the poor have a long history and are now a common
     feature of many developing countries. Economists have proposed several
     theories of joint-liability lending that stress various aspects of its
     informational and enforcement advantages over other forms of lending.
     This paper analyzes how joint-liability lending promotes screening,
     monitoring, state verification and enforcement of repayment. An empirical
     section draws on case studies to highlight how joint liability works in
     practice.},
  url = {http://www.econ.yale.edu/ guinnane/jlreview.pdf},
}

@book{gurr:MAR-1993,
  title = {Minorities at Risk: {A} Global View of Ethnopolitical
                   Conflicts},
  publisher = {United States Institute of Peace},
  year = {1993},
  author = {Ted R. Gurr},
  address = {Washington, D. C.},
  pages = {448},
  url = {http://www.cidcm.umd.edu/inscr/mar/},
  isbn = {1-878379-24-0},
}

@book{gusfield:SCS-1986,
  title = {Symbolic Crusade: Status Politics and The American
                   Temperance Movement},
  publisher = {University of Illinois Press},
  year = {1986},
  author = {Gusfield, Joseph R.},
  address = {Urbana},
  edition = {2nd},
  lccn = {HV5292.G8},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0-252-01312-3},
}

@article{hardin:SCI-1968-S95,
  author = {Garrett Hardin},
  title = {The Tragedy of the Commons},
  journal = {Science},
  year = {1968},
  volume = {162},
  pages = {1243--1248},
  url = {http://www.constitution.org/cmt/tragcomm.htm},
}

@book{hardin:TAT-2002,
  title = {Trust and {T}rustworthiness},
  publisher = pub-rsf,
  year = {2002},
  author = {Russell Hardin},
  isbn = {0-87154-342-7},
}

@book{goffman:DAS-1988,
  publisher = {Praeger},
  year = {1988},
  editor = {Dramaturgical analysis of social interaction},
  author = {Alexander Paul Hare},
  address = addr-ny,
  note = {With selections from the works of Erving Goffman, David A. Snow},
  lccn = {HM291 .H1566},
  isbn = {0275927628},
}

@book{hayek:COL-1960,
  title = {The Constitution of Liberty},
  publisher = pub-ucp,
  year = {1960},
  author = {Friedrich A. Hayek},
  address = addr-chi,
  edition = {First},
  note = {Paperback Edition 1978},
  lccn = {JC585.H417},
  isbn = {0-226-32084-7},
  excerpt = {18: Above all, however, we must
     recognize that we may be free and yet miserable. Liberty does not mean
     all good things or the absence of all evils. It is true that to be
     free may mean freedom to starve, to make costly mistakes, or to run
     mortal risks. In the sense in which we use the term, the penniless
     vagabond who lives precariously by constant improvisation is indeed
     freer than the conscripted soldier with all his security and relative
     comfort. But if liberty may therefore not always seem preferable
     to other goods, it is a distinctive good that needs a distinctive
     name. And though ,,political liberty`` and ,,inner liberty`` are
     long-established alternative uses of the term which, with a little care,
may
     be employed without causing confusion, it is questionable whether
     the use of the word ,,liberty`` in the sense of ,,power`` should be
     tolerated.},
}

@book{hayek:TFC-1988,
  title = {The Fatal Conceit},
  publisher = pub-ucp,
  year = {1988},
  author = {Friedrich August Hayek},
  volume = {1},
  edition = {1st},
  note = {edited by W. W. Bartley, III.},
}

@book{hayek:LLL-1974,
  title = {Law, Legislation, and Liberty},
  publisher = pub-ucp,
  year = {1974},
  author = {Friedrich August Hayek},
  edition = {1st},
}

@book{hewitt:SAS-1976,
  title = {Self and Society: A Symbolic Interactionist Social Psychology},
  publisher = pub-abl,
  year = {1976},
  author = {Hewitt, John P.},
  address = addr-bom,
  edition = {First},
  lccn = {HM251.H494},
  isbn = {0-205-05471-4},
}

@incollection{holmes:PAC-1995-42,
  pages = {42--68},
  title = {The Secret History of Self-Interest},
  year = {1995},
  author = {Stephen Holmes},
  booktitle = {Passions and Constraint: On The Theory of Liberal
                   Democracy},
}

@article{ihaka:JCS-1996-299,
  author = {Ross Ihaka and Robert Gentleman},
  title = {R: A Language for Data Analysis and Graphics},
  journal = {Journal of Computational and Graphical Statistics},
  year = {1996},
  volume = {5},
  number = {3},
  pages = {299--314},
  url = {http://www.r-project.org},
}

@article{jackman:ARP-1998-47,
  author = {Robert W. Jackman and Ross A. Miller},
  title = {Social capital and politics},
  journal = j-arps,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {1},
  pages = {47--73},
}

@incollection{jasminsky:MFDNES-2000121-15,
  author = {Martin Jasminsky},
  title = {Kampelicky: miliardove tunely [Cooperative saving
                   banks: ``tunnels'' in rank of billions]},
  booktitle = {MF Dnes [newspapers Today]},
  publisher = {MAFRA, a. s.},
  year = {2000},
  number = {XI/279},
  pages = {15},
  address = addr-prg,
  month = dec,
  note = {Article refers to data of the Finance Ministry and the
                   State Authority for Supervision over the Cooperative
                   Savings Banks.},
}

@book{jezek:PPV-1996,
  title = {Pravo prumysloveho vlastnictvi --- pravni a
                   mezinarodni predpisy s vykladem a judiakturou},
  publisher = {Linde},
  year = {1996},
  author = {J. Jezek},
  address = {Praha},
  edition = {1.},
}

@article{jonas:CWM-2003-01,
  author = {Michael Jonas},
  title = {Black power: Why are {A}frican-{A}mericans still
                   struggling to get ahead in {B}oston politics?},
  journal = {CommonWealth Magazine},
  year = {2003},
  volume = {Fall},
  annote = {Shows the politicians side of the Boston in 1990 -- apparently not
            everybody was happy with ministers replacing politicians in
        providing solutions to the community problems.},
}

@article{jones:APR-1981-688,
  author = {Bryan D. Jones},
  title = {Party and Bureaucracy: The Influence of Intermediary
                   Groups on Urban Public Service Delivery},
  journal = j-apsr,
  year = {1981},
  volume = {75},
  number = {3},
  pages = {688--700},
}

@article{kahan:CLR-2002-1513,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Reciprocity, Collective Action, and Community Policing},
  journal = {California Law Review},
  year = {2002},
  volume = {90},
  pages = {1513--1539},
  annote = {see
                   2003/skola/summer_reading-int3859/kahan_CLR-2002-1513.lyx},
}

@techreport{kahan:TVD-2002,
  author = {Kahan, Dan M.},
  title = {The {T}heory of {V}alue {D}ilema: {A} {C}ritique of the {E}conomic
{A}nalysis of {C}riminal {L}aw},
  institution = {Center for Law, Economics and Public Policy, Yale Law School},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Research Paper},
  number = {280},
}

@techreport{kahan:LEP-2002-281,
  author = {Kahan, Dan M.},
  title = {The Logic of Reciprocity: Trust, Collective Action, and Law},
  institution = {Center for Law, Economics and Public Policy, Yale Law School},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Research Paper},
  number = {281},
  note = {Presented at Law \& Society Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, 2003},
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=361400},
}

@article{kahan:UCR-2000-607,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Gentle Nudges vs. Hard Shoves: Solving the Sticky
                   Norms Problem},
  journal = {University of Chicago Law Review},
  year = {2000},
  volume = {67},
  pages = {607--???},
}

@article{kahan:UCLR-1999-1933,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Postscript: Unthinkable Misrepresentations: {A}
                   Response to Tonry},
  journal = {UCLA Law Review},
  year = {1999},
  volume = {46},
  pages = {1933--???},
  annote = {Defense against \cite{tonry:UCLR-1999-1751}, who is
                   otherwise very honorable scholar, because shaming was
                   never meant to be only tool of crime prevention, but
                   shame is one of the components by which punishment
                   works for the crime prevention, which can be also used
                   as an explanation why some modern non-prison
                   punishments do not work well---there is not much shame
                   in public works, just contrary voluntary workers in
                   these areas are very offended by their comparison with
                   criminals.},
}

@article{kahan:HLR-1999-413,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {The Secret Ambition of Deterrence},
  journal = j-hlr,
  year = {1999},
  volume = {113},
  number = {2},
  pages = {413--500},
  abstract = {In this Article, Professor Kahan identifies the political and
     moral economies of deterrence theory in legal discourse. Drawing on
     an extensive social science literature, he shows that deterrence
     arguments in fact have little impact on citizens' views on controversial
     policies such as capital punishment, gun control, and hate crime laws.
     Citizens conventionally defend their positions in deterrence terms only
     because the alternative is a highly contentious expressive idiom,
     which social norms, strategic calculation, and liberal morality all
     condemn. But not all citizens respond to these forces. Expressive
     zealots have an incentive to frame controversial issues in culturally
     partisan terms, thereby forcing moderate citizens to defect from the
     deterrence detente and declare their cultural allegiances as well.
     Accordingly, deliberations permanently cycle between the disengaged,
     face-saving idiom of deterrence and the partisan, face-breaking idiom of
     expressive condemnation. These dynamics, Professor Kahan argues,
     complicate the normative assessment of deterrence. By abstracting from
     contentious expressive judgments, deterrence arguments serve the
     ends of liberal public reason, which enjoins citizens to advance
     arguments accessible to individuals of diverse moral persuasions. But
     precisely because deterrence arguments denude the law of social meaning,
     the prominence of the deterrence idiom impedes progressives from
     harnessing the expressive power of the law to challenge unjust social
     norms. There is no stable discourse equilibrium between the deterrence
     and expressive idioms, either as a positive matter or a normative
     one.},
}

@article{kahan:UCLR-1999-1859,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Symposium: Privatizing Criminal Law: Strategies for
                   Private Norm Enforcement in the Inner City},
  journal = {UCLA Law Review},
  year = {1999},
  volume = {46},
  pages = {1859--???},
  annote = {Explains, that state doesn't have a monopoly on
                   punishing, because there is also ``power of social
                   norms as a regulatory device''. However, shame works
                   only when the criminals are not living in the open
                   contempt of state and its norms and values. The state
                   has no authority in the inner-city, but it does not
                   mean that no-one has. Authority could be supported by
                   Church-State Social Norm Alliance (TPC and Chicago
                   prayer vigils). Moreover, juveniles themselves can be
                   deputized for the crime prevention: gun-control program
                   in Charleston, South Carolina. (Whatever I think about
                   it, there is apparently some success with this). Why
                   some other organizations cannot work as well as Church
                   (Scouting for Boys)? Problem of all these private
                   intermediaries could be that they constitute too thin
                   veil between police and gangs, so they loose their own
                   authority and legitimacy. Of course, another possible
                   pitfall of all this beauty of privatization of crime
                   policing is possibility of misusing this community
                   power for promulgation of prejudices and racism. Social
                   meaning = Moral order. Literature on ``social meaning
                   of crime''?},
}

@article{kahan:CLR-1999-795,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Democracy Schmemocracy},
  journal = {Cardozo Law Review},
  year = {1999},
  volume = {20},
  pages = {795--??},
  month = jan,
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@article{kahan:JLS-1998-609,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Social Meaning and The Economic Analysis of Crime},
  journal = j-jls,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {27},
  pages = {609--621},
  abstract = {This essay examines the importance of social meaning for
     the economic analysis of crime. Against the background of social
     norms, the actions of individuals and communities convey information
     about what they value. Individuals take these meanings into account
     when they are responding to the incentives created by criminal law;
     communities take them into account when they decide what to punish, how to
     punish it, and how severely. Because meaning matters in these ways,
     economic analyses of criminal law that abstract from meaning--by, say,
     considering only how various policies affect the expected penalty for
     wrongdoing--produce unreliable predictions and prescriptions. The essay
     makes out this claim by considering a number of concrete examples,
     including tax evasion, juvenile gun possession, gang criminality,
     alternative sanctions (such as shaming penalties), and corporate criminal
     liability.},
  annote = {see
                   2003/skola/summer_reading-int3859/kahan_JLS-1998-609.lyx},
}

@article{kahan:MLR-1997-2477,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Response: Between Economics and Sociology: The New
                   Path of Deterrence},
  journal = {Michigan Law Review},
  year = {1997},
  volume = {95},
  pages = {2477--???},
  annote = {2BMINED FOR REFS On the one hand this general
                   explanation of the weaknesses of the economical
                   analysis missing social meaning and other soft
                   phenomena. Also describes application of income efect
                   in crime prevention -- e.g., increase of punishment for
                   rape, could induce more murders, because rapist would
                   not add substantial punishment as his possibility, but
                   he could certainly diminish possibility of his catching
                   by killing the woman.},
}

@article{kahan:MLR-1997-127,
  author = {Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Essay: Ignorance of Law is an Excuse -- but only for
                   the Virtuous},
  journal = {Michigan Law Review},
  year = {1997},
  volume = {96},
  pages = {127--???},
}

@inbook{kapras:JND-1931-171,
  chapter = {3.},
  title = {Jazykove a narodnostni dejiny v Ceske korune [Language
                   and national history in lands of the Czech crown]},
  publisher = {Nakladatelstvi Legii},
  year = {1931},
  author = {Jan Kapras},
  volume = {V.},
  series = {Ceskoslovenska vlastiveda [Czechoslovak national
                   history and geography]},
  address = addr-prg,
}

@article{katyal:MLR-1997-2385,
  author = {Neal Katyal},
  title = {Deterrence's Difficulty},
  journal = j-mlr,
  year = {1997},
  volume = {95},
  pages = {2385--???},
  annote = {2BREAD reviewed in \cite{kahan:MLR-1997-2477}.
                   Invented ideas like income effect in crime prevention.},
}

@book{kaufman:FGD-1990,
  title = {Finding {G}roups in {D}ata: {A}n {I}ntroduction to
                   {C}luster {A}nalysis},
  publisher = pub-wil,
  year = {1990},
  author = {Kaufman, Leonard and {Peter J. Rousseeuw}},
  series = {Wiley series in probability and mathematical
                   statistics. Applied probability and statistics},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {QA278.K38 1990},
  isbn = {0471878766},
}

@book{kelling:FBW-1996,
  title = {Fixing Broken Windows: Restoring Order and Reducing
                   Crime in Our Communities},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1996},
  author = {George L. Kelling and Catherine M. Coles},
  note = {Is it article, book, or what?},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {068483738},
}

@article{keltner:CAE-1999-505,
  author = {Dacher Keltner and Jonathan Haidt},
  title = {Social Functions of Emotions at Four Levels of
                   Analysis},
  journal = j-cae,
  year = {1999},
  volume = {13},
  number = {5},
  pages = {505--521},
  note = {2BREAD},
  issn = {0269-9931},
  abstract = {In this paper we integrate claims and
     findings concerning the social functions of emotions at the individual,
     dyadic, group, and cultural levels of analysis. Across levels of
     analysis theorists assume that emotions solve problems important to
     social relationships in the context of ongoing interactions. Theorists
     diverge, however, in their assumptions about the origins, defining
     characteristics, and consequences of emotions, and in their preferred forms
of
     data. We illustrate the differences and compatibilities among these
     levels of analysis for the specific case of embarrassment. We close by
     suggesting research strategies that incorporate a social-functional
     perspective.},
}

@techreport{kennedy:NCJ-160766,
  author = {Kennedy, David M.},
  title = {Juvenille Gun Violence and Gun Markets in {B}oston},
  institution = {National Institute of Justice},
  year = {1997},
  type = {Report},
  number = {NCJ-160766},
  address = addr-wdc,
}

@book{khkear:FNC-1900,
  title = {Fence},
  year = {1900},
  author = {Karl Khekar},
}

@techreport{kirk:BPZ-1998-86,
  author = {Russell Kirk},
  title = {Burke a politika zvyklosti},
  institution = {Obcansky institut},
  year = {1998},
  month = feb,
  note = {A chapter from the book ``The Conservative Mind''
                   translated by Jiri Pilucha.},
  annote = {},
}

@book{knap:AZK-1996,
  title = {Autorsky zakon a predpisy souvisejici --- komentar},
  publisher = linde,
  year = {1996},
  author = {Karel Knap},
  address = {Praha},
  edition = {5.},
}

@book{knapp:OPH-1998,
  title = {Obcanske pravo hmotne -- ucebnice},
  publisher = {CODEX Bohemia},
  year = {1998},
  author = {Viktor Knapp},
  volume = {II.},
  address = {Praha},
  edition = {2.},
}

@book{koenig:DTL-2001,
  title = {In Defense of Tort Law},
  publisher = {New York University Press},
  year = {2001},
  author = {Thomas H. Koenig and Michalel L. Rustad},
  address = {New York},
}

@incollection{kollock:IAS-1997,
  title = {Design Principles for Online Communities},
  publisher = {O'Reilly \& Associates},
  year = {1997},
  author = {Peter Kollock},
  address = addr-cam,
  annote = {2BREAD},
  url = {http://research.microsoft.com/scg/papers/Kollock/Principles.htm},
  booktitle = {The Internet and Society: Harvard Conference
                   Proceedings},
}

@incollection{kollock:CMC-1996-109,
  pages = {109--128},
  title = {Managing the Virtual Commons: Cooperation and Conflict
                   in Computer Communities},
  publisher = {John Benjamins},
  year = {1996},
  author = {Peter Kollock and Marc Smith},
  address = {Amsterdam},
  annote = {Long discussion of conflict resolution in BBS/Usenet
                   perspective; not much surprising, but interesting
                   application of Ostrom (1990) to the Internet area (with
                   interesting summary of the book).},
  url = {http://research.microsoft.com/scg/papers/Kollock/Commons.htm},
  booktitle = {Computer-Mediated Communication: Linguistic, Social,
                   and Cross-Cultural Perspectives},
}

@book{kovtun:TVH-1994,
  title = {Tajuplna vrazda: pripad Leopolda Hilsnera [Mysterious
                   murder: the case of Leopold Hilsner]},
  publisher = sefer,
  year = {1994},
  author = {Jiri Kovtun},
  address = addr-prg,
}

@misc{kuhn:PDI-2000,
  author = {Steven T. Kuhn},
  title = {Prisoner's Dilemma},
  year = {2000},
  annote = {Thorough explanation of the Prisoner's dilemma with
                   bibliography.},
  url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/prisoner-dilemma/},
}

@techreport{silanes:PUS-1995-5113,
  author = {Florencio López-de-Silanes and Robert W. Wishny and
                   Andrei Shleifer},
  title = {Privatization in the United States},
  institution = {National Bureau of Economic Research},
  year = {1995},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {5113},
  address = {Cambrdige, Ma.},
  month = may,
  abstract = {In the United States, the two principal modes of producing local
     government services are in-house provision by government employees and
     contracting out to private suppliers, also know as privatization.
     The evidence indicates that state clean-government laws and state
     laws restricting county spending encourage privatization, whereas
     strong public unions discourage it. The evidence is inconsistent with
     the view that efficiency considerations alone govern the provision
     mode, and points to the important role played by political patronage
     and taxpayer resistance to government spending in the privatization
     decision.},
  annote = {purely political-economics research},
}

@book{lahaye:SCF-1978,
  title = {Spirit-Controlled Family Living},
  publisher = {Fleming H. Revell Company},
  year = {1978},
  author = {Tim LaHaye and Bev LaHaye},
  address = {Old Tappan, New Jersey},
}

@misc{laitin:CEF-2001,
  author = {David Laitin and Daniel Posner},
  title = {Constructing Ethnic Fractionalization Indices},
  year = {2001},
  note = {Undated memo for discussion.},
  url = {http://www.duke.edu/web/licep/1/posner/laitinposner.pdf},
}

@incollection{laitin:SOD-2000-1,
  pages = {xxx},
  title = {Comparative Politics: The State of the Subdiscipline},
  publisher = pub-wwnc,
  year = {2000},
  author = {David D. Laitin},
  url = {http://www.stanford.edu/ dlaitin/papers/Cpapsa.doc},
  booktitle = {The State of the Discipline},
}

@techreport{lattimore:NCJ-1997-167262,
  author = {Pamela K. Lattimore and James Trudeau and Riley, K.
                   Jack and Leiter, Jordan and Edwards, Steven},
  title = {Homicide in {E}ight {U}. {S}. {C}ities: {T}rends,
                   {C}ontext, and {P}olicy {I}mplications},
  institution = {National Insititute of Justice},
  year = {1997},
  type = {Research Report},
  number = {167262},
  address = {Washington, DC},
  month = dec,
}

@book{dufour:SBT-1991,
  title = {Slovnik biblicke teologie},
  publisher = {Velehrad - Krestanska akademie},
  year = {1991},
  author = {Xavier Leon-Dufour and others},
  address = {Rim},
  note = {prelozil Petr Kolar},
}

@techreport{levi:SOT-1996-23,
  author = {Margaret Levi},
  title = {A State of Trust},
  institution = pub-eui,
  year = {1996},
  type = {EUI Working Papers RSC},
  number = {23},
  address = addr-eui,
  annote = {see archiv/2001/clanky/putnam/levi_SOT-1996-23.txt},
}

@book{levi:LOR-1990,
  title = {The {L}imits of rationality},
  publisher = pub-ucp,
  year = {1990},
  author = {Margaret Levi},
  address = addr-chi,
  lccn = {HM101.L495},
  annote = {No nead to read now.},
  isbn = {0226742385},
}

@incollection{lewis:GID-1970-000,
  title = {The Humanitarian Theory of Punishment},
  year = {1970},
  author = {C. S. Lewis},
  booktitle = {God in the Dock},
}

@book{lincoln:BCA-1990,
  title = {The Black Church in the African-American Experience},
  publisher = {Duke University Press},
  year = {1990},
  author = {C[harles] Eric Lincoln and Lawrence H. Mamiya},
  address = {Durham},
  pages = {xvi+519},
  lccn = {BR563.N4 L55},
  annote = {2BREREAD The first and foremost, this book presents
                   huge wealth of sociological data on every possible
                   aspect of the Black Church. Unfortuantely, it limits
                   itself only to the Black Church (i.e., denominations
                   which are predominantly black), but it claims, that
                   these denominations include more than 80 % of all
                   blacks, so that it should be reasonably significant for
                   whole black religious experience. On the other hand, it
                   is possible, that white denominations are much more
                   important for integration of blacks into whole
                   population. The claim, which goes through whole book is
                   that traditionall view of religious experience as
                   totally private and separated from publici (and
                   secular) life is misleading in the black Christianity,
                   where there is only partial differentiation between
                   secular and profane. However, the biggest thrust of the
                   book is in presentation and interpretation of the
                   sociological data they compiled during the research
                   (and great description of BC history). Although, they
                   find some trend for secularization among black (esp.
                   with growing opportunities outside of the Church for
                   young blacks self-realization), they provide forcefull
                   evidence of staying importance of the Black Church in
                   the black communities of USA.},
  isbn = {0-8223-1057-0},
}

@book{lind:SPP-1988,
  title = {The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice},
  publisher = {Plenum Press},
  year = {1988},
  author = {Lind, E. Allan and Tyler, Tom R.},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {K380.L56},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@techreport{lochner:IPC-9474,
  author = {Lance Lochner},
  title = {Individual Perceptions of the Criminal Justice System},
  institution = {NBER -- National Bureau of Economic Research},
  year = {2003},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {9474},
  address = addr-cam,
  month = jan,
  url = {http://www.nber.org/papers/w9474},
}

@book{locke:LCT-1689,
  title = {A Letter Concerning Toleration},
  year = {1689},
  author = {John Locke},
  annote = {What Locke invented in this letter was the separation
                   of the church and state. It is obvious that he was very
                   much inspired by the sorry state of England after
                   nearly hundred of years of civil religious war.
                   Therefore, he has implicitly decided that the very most
                   important value in the life of the society is peace and
                   every other value (especially religious truth) should
                   be inferior to it. Then he very rationally develops the
                   basic of the church-state relation from this implicit
                   assumption of values. However, there is not (and there
                   probably could not be) any reason why the peace is the
                   most important value. Under the current sorry
                   circumstances of the world and the Church we may
                   probably not get better than somehow separating church
                   and state, but let us not pretend, that it is the
                   ideal. It is not. It is just necessary agreement, so
                   that we won't kill each other (again). Is ``Sola
                   Scriptura'' a product of rationalism? Luther v.
                   conservatism? --- Locke's thesis of separation is based
                   on the finding that Jesus and his early disciples have
                   never established a commonwealth (secular world order)
                   among the followers. --- However, religions with
                   external government (Locke mentions islam ruled from
                   Constantinopol, but he had obviously on mind Catholics)
                   should not be allowed, because it is against the
                   magistrate. And atheists should not be tolerated as
                   well, because they cannot reliably function in the
                   society.},
  url = {http://www.constitution.org/jl/tolerati.htm},
}

@techreport{lorenzen:ICL-1998,
  author = {Mark Lorenzen},
  title = {Information cost, learning and trust: Lessons from
                   cooperation and higher-order capabilities amongst
                   geographically proximate firms},
  institution = {Danish Research Unit for Industrial Dynamics},
  year = {1998},
  type = {DRUID Working Paper},
  number = {98-21},
  address = {Departement of Industrial Economics and Strategy,
                   Copenhagen Business School, Nansengade 19, 6},
  keywords = {trust, governance, information costs,
     organizational learning, industrial districts},
}

@book{lyon:CUS-1999,
  title = {The Community in Urban Society},
  publisher = {Waveland Press, Inc.},
  year = {1999},
  author = {Larry Lyon},
  address = {Prospect Heights, Il.},
  isbn = {1-57766-071-4},
}

@article{macaulay:ASR-1963-55,
  author = {Stewart Macaulay},
  title = {Non-Contractual Reelations in Business: {A}
                   Preliminary Study},
  journal = j-asr,
  year = {1963},
  volume = {28},
  number = {1},
  pages = {55--67},
  annote = {In its time certainly revolutionary work, now it is
                   not such big shot. The main idea is, that contract law
                   is often ignored in business relations. In many
                   situations businessmen do not resort to contracts.
                   Therefore, another interesting question author tries to
                   answer (again, emphasizing, that his study is just a
                   preliminary one).},
}

@book{mallory:LEC-1990,
  title = {Law \& Economics: {A} Comparative Approach to Theory
                   \& Practice},
  publisher = pub-wst,
  year = {1990},
  author = {Robin Paul Mallory},
  isbn = {0-314-72586-5},
}

@book{marchenko:LLE-1989,
  title = {To Live Like Everyone},
  publisher = {Holt},
  year = {1989},
  author = {Anatoly Marchenko},
  address = addr-ny,
  note = {Translation of: Zhivi kak vse.},
  lccn = {HV9712.5.M37 A3},
  isbn = {0-8050-0898-5},
}

@book{margies:MIL-1992,
  title = {Milost},
  publisher = logos,
  year = {1992},
  author = {Wolfhard Margies},
  address = {Praha},
}

@article{markus:DBA-2003,
  author = {Maria R. Markus},
  title = {Trust: `{B}etter {T}han {R}ational'?},
  journal = {The Drawing Board: An Australian Review of Public Affairs},
  year = {2003},
  issn = {1443-8607},
  annotate = {See 2004/clanky/LSA-konference/podklady/markus\_dba-2003.lyx},
  url = {http://www.econ.usyd.edu.au/drawingboard/digest/0308/markus.html},
}

@incollection{marx:IRG-1990-120,
  author = {Robert. W. Marx},
  title = {The {TIGER} system: automating the geogrpahic
                   structure of the United States Census},
  booktitle = {Introductory Readings in Geographic Information
                   Systems},
  publisher = {Taylor \& Francis},
  year = {1990},
  editor = {Donna J. Penquet and Duane F. Marble},
  chapter = {9},
  pages = {120--141},
  annote = {The goals of TIGER are twofold: support of data
                   collection (assignement of addresses to geographical
                   locations (census blocks)), disemination of results).
                   NOT to be foundation of GIS projects.},
  isbn = {0-85066-856-5},
}

@book{massey:AAS-1993,
  title = {American Apartheid: Segregation and the Making of the
                   Underclass},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1993},
  author = {Douglas S. Massey and Nancy A. Denton},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {E185.61.M373},
  subject = {Race discrimination-United States-History-20th century.
Segregation-United
     States-History-20th century. Afro-Americans-Social conditions. Inner
cities-United
     States-History-20th century. United States-Race relations. United
States-Social
     policy.},
  isbn = {0-674-01820-6},
}

@article{matsueda:AJS-1992-1577,
  author = {Matsueda, R[oss L.]},
  title = {Reflected Appraisals, Parental Labelling, and
                   Delinquency: Specifying a Symbolic Interactionist
                   Theory},
  journal = j-ajs,
  year = {1992},
  volume = {97},
  pages = {1577-1611},
}

@article{matsueda:JRC-1988-277,
  author = {Matsueda, R[oss L.]},
  title = {The Current State of Differential Association Theory},
  journal = j-jrcd,
  year = {1988},
  volume = {34},
  pages = {277-306},
}

@article{matsueda:ASR-1987-826,
  author = {Matsueda, R[oss L.] and Heimer, K.},
  title = {Race, Family Structure, and Delinquency: A Test of
                   Differential Association and Social Control Theories},
  journal = j-asr,
  year = {1987},
  volume = {52},
  pages = {826-840},
}

@article{matsueda:ASR-1997-429,
  author = {Matsueda, Ross L.},
  title = {'Cultural Deviance Theory': The Remarkable
                   Peersistence of a flawed Term},
  journal = {Theoretical Criminology},
  year = {1997},
  volume = {1},
  pages = {429-452},
}

@article{matthews:FAF-1997-50,
  author = {Jessica Matthews},
  title = {Power Shift},
  journal = j-fa,
  year = {1997},
  volume = {76},
  pages = {50--66},
}

@book{metz:DAD-1990,
  title = {Delinquency \& Drift},
  publisher = {Transaction Publishing},
  year = {1990},
  author = {David Matza},
  edition = {Reprint},
  month = dec,
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0-88738-804-3},
}

@book{matza:DAD-1990,
  title = {Delinquency and drift},
  publisher = {Transaction Publishers},
  year = {1990},
  author = {Matza, David},
  address = {New Brunswick, N.J., USA},
  note = {Reprint. Originally published: New York : Wiley, 1964},
  keyword = {Juvenile delinquency, Criminal psychology, Deviant
     behavior, Juvenile delinquency -- United States},
  lccn = {HV9069 .M37},
  isbn = {0-887-38804-3},
}

@article{mcadams:HLR-1995-1003,
  author = {Richard McAdams},
  title = {Cooperation and Conflict: The Economics of Group
                   Status Production and Race Discrimination},
  journal = j-hlr,
  year = {1995},
  volume = {108},
  pages = {1003--???},
  annote = {2BREAD discrimination law},
}

@techreport{mcardle:CRPHU-2003-04,
  author = {Nancy McArdle},
  title = {Race, Place, and Opportunity ({B}oston)},
  institution = {The Civil Rights Project, Harvard University},
  year = {2003},
  type = {Study},
  month = apr,
  note = {two parts},
  url =
{http://www.civilrightsproject.harvard.edu/research/metro/three_metros.php},
}

@unpublished{meares:CCC-2001,
  author = {Tracey L. Meares},
  title = {Churches, Communities, and Crime: {A} Community
                   Focused Model of Faith-Based Initiatives},
  note = {unpublished manuscript, on file with Dan M. Kahan; the
                   author is from the University of Chicago},
  month = sep,
  year = {2001},
  url = {http://www.law.uchicago.edu/faculty/meares/publications.html},
}

@article{meares:LSR-1998-805,
  author = {Tracey L. Meares and Dan M. Kahan},
  title = {Law and (Norms of) Order in the Inner City},
  journal = j-lsr,
  volume = {32},
  pages = {805--???},
}

@article{mikulincer:BAS-24-261,
  author = {Mario Mikulincer and Victor Florian},
  title = {The Effects of Mortality Salience on Self-Serving
                   Attributions: Evidence for the Function of Self-Esteem
                   as a Terror Management Mechanism},
  journal = {Basic and Applied Social Psychology},
  year = {2002},
  volume = {24},
  number = {4},
  pages = {261--271},
}

@article{moore:LSR-1973-719,
  author = {Sally Falk Moore},
  title = {Law and Social Change: The Semi-autonomous social
                   field as an appropriate subject of study},
  journal = j-lsr,
  year = {1973},
  volume = {7},
  number = {4},
  pages = {719--746},
  annote = {719: ``In our highly centralized political system,
                   with its advanced technology and communication
                   apparatus, it is tempting to think that legal
                   innovation can effect social change. Roscoe Pound
                   perceived the law as a tool for social engineering
                   (`Contemporary juristic theory' in Dennis Lloyd (ed.)
                   `Introduction to Jurisprudence', London, Stevens \&
                   sons, 2nd edition, 1965, pp. 247--252).'' Article is a
                   polemic with this statement. Introduces a term of
                   ``semi-autonomous social field'': 722: ``The
                   semi-autonomous social field is defined and its
                   boundaries identified not by its organization (it may
                   be a corporate group, it may not) but by a processual
                   characteristics, the fact that it can generate rules
                   and coerce or induce compliance to them. Thus an arena
                   in which a number of corporate groups deal with each
                   other may be a semi-autonomous social field. Also the
                   corporate groups themselves may each constitute a
                   semi-autonomous social field. Many such fields may
                   articulate with others in such a way as to form complex
                   chains, rather they way the social networks of
                   individuals, when attached to each other, may be
                   considered as unending chains. The interdependent
                   articulation of many different social fields
                   constitutes one of the basic characteristics of complex
                   societies.'' Author describes as the semi-autonomous
                   social fields create their own internal set of rules
                   enforce by non-legal means, which although not entirely
                   independent on the external forces (e.\,g., law;
                   therefore, ``semi-autonomous''), show strong resistance
                   against the change. Such resistance is based on the
                   self-organization of a field, which is just partially
                   taken over by the legal rules. Author presents her
                   point on the examples of the New York ready-made
                   women's dresses and the Chagga tribe living on the
                   slopes of the Mount Kilimanjaro between 198 and 1969.
                   Whole text is construed as a proposal for further
                   study, rather than completed study, and two examples
                   used are introduced by saying, that they are only
                   sketches of what should be real study. 743: ``The law
                   (in the sense of state enforceable law) is only one of
                   a number of factors that affect the decision people
                   make, the actions they take and the relationships they
                   have. Consequently important aspects of the connection
                   between law and social change emerge only if law is
                   inspected in the context of ordinary social life.''},
}

@book{mozny:SOR-1999,
  title = {Sociologie rodiny [Sociology of family]},
  publisher = pub-sn,
  year = {1999},
  author = {Ivo Mozny},
  address = addr-prg,
}

@book{mozny:PTS-1991,
  title = {Proc tak snadno \dots{}, nektere rodinne duvody
                   sametove revoluce [Why so easy \dots{} some family
                   reasons of the velvet revolution]},
  publisher = pub-sn,
  year = {1991},
  author = {Ivo Mozny},
  address = addr-prg,
}

@article{muller-APSR-1994-635,
  author = {Edward N. Muller and Mitchell A. Seligson},
  title = {Civic culture and democracy: the question of causal
                   relationships},
  journal = j-apsr,
  year = {1994},
  volume = {88},
  number = {3},
  pages = {635--52},
  abstract = {A study was conducted to examine the relevance
     of attitudes of the general public for the establishment of stable
     democratic regimes. Cross-national data were employed to test a causal
     model of macrosocietal and microattitudinal determinants of change in
     level of democracy. The model allows inferences to be drawn about
     the possibility of unidirectional or reciprocal causation between
     civic culture attitudes and democracy. The findings indicate that
     most civic culture attitudes do not have any significant effect on
     change in democracy. In fact, one such attitude, interpersonal trust,
     seems to be an effect rather than a cause of democracy. However, an
     exception to the general findings is the percentage of the general
     public that prefers to change society by gradual reform instead of
     changing it by revolutionary action or defending it staunchly against
     subversive forces. Support for gradual reform exerts a positive effect on
     change in democracy and is unrelated to a nation's years of continuous
     democracy.},
}

@article{muraskin:AJS-1974-1484,
  author = {William Muraskin},
  title = {The Moral Basis of a Backward Sociologist: {E}dward
                   {B}anfield, the {I}talians, and the
                   {I}talian-{A}mericans},
  journal = j-ajs,
  year = {1974},
  volume = {79},
  number = {6},
  pages = {1484--96},
}

@misc{krishna:WCR-2002,
  author = {{Hare Krishna News Network}},
  title = {Why is the Crime Rate Falling in New York City?},
  howpublished = {Report on site of Hare Krishna News Network},
  month = feb,
  year = {2002},
  url = {http://preaching.krishna.org/Articles/2002/02/019.html},
}

@incollection{nisbet:ECS-2000-33,
  author = {Nisbet, R.},
  title = {The {Q}uest for {C}ommunity: {A} {S}tudy in {T}he {E}thics of {O}rder
and {F}reedom},
  booktitle = {The {E}ssential {C}ivil {S}ociety},
  publisher = {Rowman \& Littlefield},
  year = {2000},
  editor = {Eberly, D. E.},
  pages = {33-49},
  address = {Oxford, UK},
}

@book{north:IIC-1990,
  title = {Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic
                   Performance},
  publisher = pub-cup,
  year = {1990},
  author = {D. North},
  address = addr-ny,
}

@techreport{north:CNI-1997,
  author = {Douglass C. North},
  title = {The Contribution of the New Institutional Economics to
                   an Understanding of the Transition Problem},
  institution = {World Institute for Development Economics Research},
  year = {1997},
  type = {WIDER Annual Lectures},
  number = {1},
  address = addr-hef,
  month = mar,
}

@book{north:RWW-1973,
  title = {The Rise of Western World: {A} New Economic History},
  publisher = {Cambridge University Press},
  year = {1973},
  author = {Douglass C. North and Robert Paul Thomas},
  address = {Cambridge, London, New York, New Rochelle, Melbourne,
                   Sydney},
  edition = {First},
  pages = {171},
  lccn = {HC240.N66},
  annote = {see archiv/2001/clanky/putnam/north_RWW-1973.txt},
  isbn = {0-521-29099-6},
}

@book{novotny:BBS-1956,
  title = {Biblicky slovnik},
  publisher = {Kalich -- Ceska biblicka spolecnost},
  year = {1956/1992},
  author = {Antonin Novotny},
  address = {Praha},
}

@book{oakeshott:PFS-1996,
  title = {The Politics of Faith and the Politics of Scepticism},
  publisher = pub-yup,
  year = {1996},
  author = {Michael Oakeshott},
  address = addr-nhnh,
  lccn = {JA71.023},
  annote = {2B READ},
  isbn = {0-300-06625-2},
}

@book{oakeshott:VLE-1989,
  title = {The Voice of Liberal Learning: Michael Oakeshott on
                   Education},
  publisher = pub-yup,
  year = {1989},
  author = {Michael Oakeshott},
  address = addr-nhnh,
  lccn = {LB41.0177},
  annote = {2B READ},
  isbn = {0-300-04344-9},
}

@inbook{oakeshott:RIP-1962,
  chapter = {Rationalism in Politics},
  title = {Rationalism in Politics and other essays},
  publisher = {Basic Books Publishing Co., Inc.},
  year = {1962},
  author = {Michael Oakeshott},
  address = {New York},
  lcsn = {62-15834},
  annote = {The basic polemic of the author is with Rationalism.
                   His basic point against it is a tendency to reduct all
                   understanding to technique. Whole idea is based on
                   difference between ``technique'' (which can be
                   self-consciously reflected and recorded in
                   (text-)books, see for example recipe book) and
                   ``practical knowledge'' (what is learned by
                   ``osmosis'', by apprenticeship, and by doing; e.\,g.,
                   mastery of cooking). Because the rationalism itself is
                   based on rejection of practical knowledge (``purge of
                   prejudices'') and tries to re-establish all knowledge
                   just by rational construction (Bacon,
                   Descartes---although apparently the latter was
                   conscious about limitations of this method), the
                   Rationalist education is not able to teach the
                   practical knowledge. And actually, none asks it do so
                   in most areas, where practical knowledge is
                   required---there we keep traditional educational
                   methods (cooking, medicine, even practice of natural
                   sciences, which are usually learned mostly in labs).
                   However, lead by rationalism we have introduced the
                   liberal democracy in our political practice and
                   thinking. Without ``prejudice'' (and aristocracy) we
                   are left with partial knowledge of society and politics
                   and this partiality is presented in numerous ideologies
                   and always-failing rational projects of reconstruction
                   of society. And here is the point, where the author
                   gets really radical, because he rejects \emph{all}
                   current political theories, from all leftist ideologies
                   (of course), through Founding Fathers (and that
                   rationalist concept of ``being born equal'' in the
                   Declaration of Independence) up to F.\,A.\,Hayek (the
                   famous sentence ``A plan to resist all planning may be
                   better than its opposite, but it belongs to the same
                   style of politics.'' is from this essay, criticizing
                   \emph{Road to Serfdom}). The problem I have with this
                   essay I have is its \emph{total} scepticism. It may be
                   true, that Rationalism destroyed traditional
                   aristocratic structure of society and morality, but
                   what we are supposed to do in their ruins in meantime
                   before (if ever; we are not sure, whether the practical
                   knowledge can be learned, where no teachers already
                   acquiring it are available) the natural politicians
                   will learn practical knowledge? Or (as previous reader
                   of the book has written in margin) ``What should the
                   `politically educated' Soviet citizen of the year 2000
                   do?'' Maybe, that the author would argue, that he at
                   least does not provide false comfort where there is no
                   comfort available .... Also from this book is a famous
                   quotation: ``In political activity men sail a boundless
                   and bottomless sea; there is neither harbor for shelter
                   nor floor for anchorage, neither starting point nor
                   appointed destination.'', which very characterize the
                   strongest part of the essay.},
}

@book{olson:RDN-1982,
  title = {The Rise and Decline of Nations: Economic Growth,
                   Stagflation, and Social Rigidities.},
  publisher = pub-yup,
  year = {1982},
  author = {M. Olson},
  address = addr-nhnh,
}

@book{olson:LCA-1965,
  title = {The logic of {C}ollective {A}ction: {P}ublic {G}oods and the {T}heory
of {G}roups},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1965},
  author = {Mancur Olson},
  address = addr-cam,
}

@book{ostrom:TSA-1990,
  title = {Time Series Analysis: Regression Techniques},
  publisher = {Sage Publications},
  year = {1990},
  author = {Ostrom Jr., Charles W.},
  number = {07-009},
  series = {Sage university papers series. Quantitative applications in the
social sciences},
  address = {Newbury Park, CA},
  edition = {Second},
}

@article{ostrom:JEP-2000-137,
  author = {Elinor Ostrom},
  title = {Collective Action and the Evolution of Social Norms},
  journal = j-jep,
  year = {2000},
  volume = {14},
  pages = {137--158},
  annote = {Zaradit, ocitovat, ale moc hloubeji se tomu nevenovat, protoze to je
  o necem jinem.},
}

@techreport{epo:EPO-1994-23,
  author = {p. 23},
  title = {Decision},
  institution = {{European Patent Office}},
  year = {1994},
  note = {Collection of Judicial Decisions in the Issues of
                   Patents and Industry Models by the Czech Patent Office},
}

@techreport{paldam:SCE-1998-8,
  author = {Martin Paldam and Gert Tinggaard Svendsen},
  title = {Is Social Capital an Effective Smoke Condenser? An
                   Essay on a Concept Linking the Social Sciences},
  institution = {Department of Economics, University of Aarhus},
  year = {1998},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {1998-8},
  address = {8210 Aarhus V, Denmark},
  month = dec,
  url = {http://www.econ.au.dk/afn/abstr98/08.htm},
}

@book{paternoster:ECC-2001,
  title = {Explaining Criminals and Crime},
  publisher = pub-rxc,
  year = {2001},
  author = {Paternoster, Raymond and Bachman, Ronet},
  address = addr-lac,
  lccn = {HV6018 .E94},
  booktitle = {Explaining Criminals and Crime},
  isbn = {1-891487-32-9},
}

@article{paternoster:LSR-1997-163,
  author = {Paternoster, Raymond and Brame, Robert and Bachman,
                   Ronet and Sherman, Lawrence W.},
  title = {Do Fair Procedures Matter? The Effect of Procedural
                   Justice on Spouse Assault},
  journal = j-lsr,
  year = {1997},
  volume = {31},
  number = {1},
  pages = {163-204},
  abstract = {In a reanalysis of the Milwaukee Domestic Violence
     Experiment, we examine whether the use of fair procedures on the
     part of police officers called to the scene of a domestic assault
     inhibits subsequent assault. Consistent with expectations, we found
     that procedural justice did suppress subsequent violence, even in
     the face of adverse outcomes. When police acted in a procedurally
     fair manner when arresting assault suspects, the rate of subsequent
     domestic violence was significantly lower than when they did not.
     Moreover, suspects who were arrested and perceived that they were
     treated in a procedurally fair manner had subsequent assault rates
     that were as low as those suspects given a more favorable outcome
     (warned and the released without arrest). The suppression effect of
     procedural justice did not depend on the personal characteristics of
     suspects.},
}

@article{patillo:ASR-1998-767,
  author = {Mary Pattillo-McCoy},
  title = {Church {C}ulture as a {S}trategy of {A}ction in the {B}lack
{C}ommunity},
  journal = j-asr,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {63},
  number = {6},
  pages = {767-784},
  month = dec,
}

@article{pattillo:ASR-1998-767,
  author = {Mary Pattillo-McCoy},
  title = {Church Culture as a Strategy of Action in the Black
                   Community},
  journal = j-asr,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {63},
  number = {2},
  pages = {767--???},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@techreport{pauly:BGD-1991,
  author = {Pauly, John J.},
  title = {A Beginner's Guide To Doing Research In Mass Communication},
  institution = {Association for Education in Journalism and Mass
Communication},
  year = {1991},
  type = {Journalism Monographs},
  number = {125},
  month = feb,
  lccn = {PN4722 J6 no. 125},
}

@book{pekny:HZC-1993,
  title = {Historie Zidu v Cechach a na Morave [History of Jews
                   in Bohemia and Moravia]},
  publisher = sefer,
  year = {1993},
  author = {Tomas Pekny},
  address = addr-prg,
}

@book{pelikanova:KOZ-1996,
  title = {Komentar k obchodnimu zakoniku},
  publisher = linde,
  year = {1996-1999},
  author = {Irena Pelikanova},
  address = {Praha},
}

@book{perin:BIA-1988,
  title = {Belonging in America},
  publisher = pub-uwp,
  year = {1988},
  author = {Constance Perin},
  address = addr-mwi,
  lccn = {HT351.P47},
  isbn = {0-299-11580-1},
}

@article{petersen:COS-1994-498,
  author = {Trond Petersen},
  title = {On the Promise of Game Theory in Sociology},
  journal = {Contemporary Sociology},
  year = {1994},
  volume = {23},
  number = {4},
  pages = {498--502},
}

@techreport{piehl:KSG-2001-019,
  author = {Piehl, Anne Morrison and Cooper, Suzanne J. and Braga, Anthony A.
and Kennedy, David M.},
  title = {Testing for Structural Breaks in the Evaluation of Programs},
  institution = {John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University},
  year = {2001},
  type = {Faculty Research Working Paper},
  number = {19},
  address = addr-cam,
  month = apr,
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract_id=270710},
}

@article{pildes:JLS-1998-725,
  author = {Richard H. Pildes},
  title = {When rights are not trumps: Social Meanings,
                   Expressive Harms, and Constitutionalism},
  journal = j-jls,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {27},
  pages = {725--???},
  annote = {2BREAD constitutionalism},
}

@book{polanyi:TGT-1944,
  title = {The Great Transformation: the political and economic
                   origins of our time},
  publisher = pub-bp,
  year = {1944},
  author = {Karl Polanyi},
  address = addr-bom,
  annote = {The book is attempt to explain abysmal state of the
                   world in the time of WW2. Author tries to explain
                   then-current problems as a result of the failure of the
                   unlimited ``self- regulating market'' (to be
                   distinguished from real free market---S.R.E. seems to
                   be an exagreevated creature, straw man, created mainly
                   to be defeated; basically ). His criticism of the
                   S.R.E. liberalism is based on (supposed) total
                   character of commoditizing whole world to be market-
                   friendly (there are no men and women, but only labor),
                   which he presents as the source of alienation and
                   destruction of the natural social structure. Society
                   has a natural tendency to self-defend against these
                   destructive forces of the S.R.E., which is the
                   regulation of the market by law. During the course of
                   the book, author describes dehumanizing effects of
                   Speenhamland law, which barred free market in labor in
                   England until 1830s' and pauperazied all labor class in
                   the same period of the time, thus creating unhuman
                   environment of Charles Dickens' England.},
  isbn = {0-8070-5679-0},
}

@misc{pope:SCI-2000,
  author = {Jeanette Pope},
  title = {Social Capital and Social Capital Indicators},
  year = {approx. 2000---there is not exact date on the page
                   itself},
  annote = {Survey of current articles, where he reads the
                   definition of social capital as ``the social ties or
                   membership of particular communities that made
                   resources, advantages and opportunities available to
                   individuals''. Term is too confused to be useful and
                   certainly doesn't offer easy solution to the problems
                   of poor societies.},
  url =
{http://www.abs.gov.au/websitedbs/D3110122.NSF/4a255eef008309e44a255eef00061e57/
6cd8b1f3f270566aca25699f0015a02a},
}

@article{porter:HBR-1995-55,
  author = {Michael E. Porter},
  title = {Competitive Advantage of the Inner City},
  journal = {Harvard Business Review},
  year = {1995},
  volume = {73},
  number = {3},
  pages = {55--71},
  month = may # {-} # jun,
  abstract = {The economic distress of America's inner cities may be
     the most pressing issue facing the nation. The sad reality is that
     the efforts of the past several decades to revitalize inner cities
     have failed. The time has come to recognize that revitalizing the
     inner cities will require a radically new approach. The question
     we should be asking is how inner city-based businesses and nearby
     employment opportunities for inner city residents can proliferate
     and grow. A sustainable economic base can be created in the inner
     city, but only as it has been created elsewhere: through private,
     for-profit initiatives and investment based on economic self-interest and
     genuine competitive advantage. An economic model must begin with the
     premise that inner city businesses must be profitable and positioned to
     compete on a regional, national, and even international scale. Our
     policies and programs have fallen into the trap of redistributing
     wealth. The real need, as well as the real opportunity, is to create
     wealth.},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@article{portes:AJS-1993-1320,
  author = {A. Portes and J. Sensenbrenner},
  title = {Embeddedness and immigration: Notes on the social
                   determinants of economic action},
  journal = j-ajs,
  year = {1993},
  volume = {98},
  pages = {1320--1350},
}

@article{portes:TAP-1996,
  author = {Portes, Alejandro and Landolt, Patricia},
  title = {Unsolved Mysteries: The {T}ocqueville Files {II}.},
  journal = j-tap,
  year = {1996},
  volume = {7},
  number = {26},
  url = {http://www.prospect.org/print/v7/26/26-cnt2.html},
}

@book{posner:LSN-2001,
  title = {Law and Social Norms},
  year = {2001},
  author = {Eric Posner},
  annote = {2BREAD family law, contract law, criminal law},
}

@book{posner:FLT-2001,
  title = {Frontiers of {L}egal {T}heory},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {2001},
  author = {Richard Posner},
  address = addr-cam,
  isbn = {0-674-00485-X},
}

@book{posner:EAL-1972,
  title = {Economic Analysis of Law},
  publisher = pub-lb,
  year = {1972},
  author = {Richard Posner},
  address = addr-bom,
}

@article{posner:ATM-2001-12,
  author = {Posner, Richard A.},
  title = {Security versus civil liberties},
  journal = j-atm,
  year = {2001},
  month = dec,
}

@book{posner:SAR-1992,
  title = {Sex and {R}eason},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1992},
  author = {Richard A. Posner},
  address = addr-cam,
  isbn = {0-674-80279-9},
}

@book{posner:AAS-1999,
  title = {An {A}ffair of {S}tate},
  author = {Richard A. Posner},
}

@misc{prusak:sct-2001,
  author = {Larry Prusak},
  title = {Storytelling: Organizational Perspective: Social
                   capital and trust},
  year = {2001},
  annote = {Just describes advantages of trust in organization and
                   economic life -- there is not only money in economics;
                   After satysifying basic necessities people do not work
                   for money only, but the biggest motivators are
                   recognition, identity, feelings about coworkers, etc.
                   Therefore, most of our firms are incorrectly set-up.
                   Generalized reciprocity.},
  url =
{http://www.creatingthe21stcentury.org/Larry12-social-capital-trust.html},
}

@techreport{putnam:BWA-2000,
  author = {Robert Putnam},
  title = {Social Capital: What is it?},
  institution = {The Saguaro Seminar: Civic Engagement in America at
                   Harvard University},
  year = {2000},
  month = sep,
  note = {Web presentation of \cite{putnam:BAC-2000}.},
  annote = {Cites
                   http://www.cpn.org/tools/dictionary/capital.html, and
                   relates to
                   http://www.bettertogether.org/socialcapital.htm},
  url = {http://bowlingalone.org/socialcapital.php3},
}

@book{putnam:BAC-2000,
  title = {Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American
                   Community},
  publisher = pub-sas,
  year = {2000},
  author = {Robert D. Putnam},
  address = addr-ny,
  annote = {see 2001/clanky/putnam/putnam_BAC-2000.lyx},
}

@article{putnam:TAP-1993,
  author = {Robert D. Putnam},
  title = {The Prosperous Community: Social Capital and Public
                   Life},
  journal = j-tap,
  year = {1993},
  volume = {13},
  number = {Spring},
  url = {http://epn.org/prospect/13/13putn.html},
}

@book{putnam:MDW-1993,
  title = {Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern
                   Italy},
  publisher = pub-pup,
  year = {1993},
  author = {Robert D. Putnam},
  address = addr-pnj,
  isbn = {0-691-03738-8},
}

@book{rabrenovic:CBU-1996,
  title = {Community Builders: {A} Tale of Neighborhood
                   Mobilization in Two Cities},
  publisher = {Temple University Press},
  year = {1996},
  author = {Gordana Rabrenovic},
  address = {Philadelphia},
  lccn = {HN80.A33R33},
  isbn = {1-56639-409-0},
}

@techreport{raiser:IIS-1997,
  author = {Martin Raiser},
  title = {Informal institutions, social capital and economic
                   transition: reflections on a neglected dimension},
  institution = {European Bank for Reconstruction and Development},
  year = {1997},
  type = {Working paper},
  number = {25},
  address = {London},
  month = dec,
}

@misc{raymond:CAB-1997,
  author = {Eric S. Raymond},
  title = {The Cathedral and the {B}azaar},
  month = jun,
  year = {1999},
  note = {version 1.45},
  url = {http://www.tuxedo.org/ esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/},
}

@misc{raymond:TMC-1999,
  author = {Eric S. Raymond},
  title = {The {M}agic {C}auldron},
  month = jun,
  year = {1999},
  note = {version 1.11},
  url = {http://www.tuxedo.org/ esr/writings/magic-cauldron/},
}

@misc{raymond:HN-1998,
  author = {Eric S. Raymond},
  title = {Homesteading the {N}oosphere},
  month = apr,
  year = {1998},
  note = {version 1.14},
  url = {http://www.tuxedo.org/ esr/writings/homesteading/},
}

@book{reiley:SEI-1997,
  title = {Security interests},
  year = {1997},
  author = {Eldon Reiley},
  annote = {Basic hornbook for legal regulation of security
                   interests.},
}

@book{reinharz:BSS-1980,
  title = {On Becoming a Social Scientist},
  publisher = {Jossey-Bass Publishers},
  year = {1979},
  author = {Shulamit Reinharz},
  address = {San Francisco, London},
  edition = {First},
  lccn = {H62 R417},
  annote = {Study on socialization of a social scientist. After he
                   disillusion with the survey technique (where random
                   numbers acquired without any context and contact with
                   reality are processed to give random results) and
                   participant observation (because of ethical dilemas of
                   undercover study of humans, and attempts to separate
                   reseracher's experience from the objective
                   observations), she creates her own technique, which she
                   calls ``experiential analysis''. The foundation is just
                   opposite of supposed sociologists objectivity --
                   reseracher should analyze her own experience in order
                   to understand the reality. Socialization is not just
                   process of accepting fixed external reality (methods,
                   rules, values), but struggle with the conflicting
                   requirements of science and reality. Therefore, aside
                   from this particular conclusion of her own
                   socialization, the author emphasizes, that
                   socialization of every social scientist has to go
                   through his own conflicts with established theory while
                   moving through the process of socialization, which is
                   characterzied as ``[getting] rid [...] of the lay
                   conception [of sociology] and move toward the insiders'
                   model by changing their attitude toward themselves and
                   toward the profession.''},
  isbn = {0-87589-416-X},
}

@article{greenberg:JPSP-1989-681,
  author = {Abram Rosenblatt and Jeff Greenberg and Sheldon
                   Solomon and Tom Pyszczynski and Deborah Lyon},
  title = {Evidence for Terror Management Theory {I}: The Effects
                   of Mortality Salience on Reactions to Those Who
                   Threaten or Bolster the Cultural Worldview},
  journal = j-jpsp,
  year = {1989},
  volume = {57},
  number = {4},
  pages = {681--690},
}

@article{roth:AER-1991-1068,
  author = {Alvin E. Roth and Vesna Prasnikar and Masahiro
                   Okuno-Fujiwara and Shmuel Zamir},
  title = {Bargaining and Market Behavior in {J}erusalem,
                   {L}jubljana, {P}ittsburgh, and {T}okyo: An Experimental
                   Study},
  journal = j-aer,
  year = {1991},
  volume = {81},
  pages = {1068--95},
  annote = {mentioned in \cite{fehr:TFR-2000-75}.},
}

@book{roucek:KOZ-1936,
  title = {Komentar k ceskoslovenskemu obecnemu zakoniku
                   obcanskemu},
  publisher = {V. Linhart},
  year = {1936},
  author = {Frantisek Roucek and Jaromir Sedlacek},
  address = {Praha},
}

@misc{rousseeuw:CFC-2003,
  author = {Peter Rousseeuw and Anja Struyf and Mia Hubert},
  title = {\texttt{cluster}: {F}unctions for cluster analysis},
  howpublished = {package for R statistical packages},
  month = {24 } # sep,
  year = {2003},
  note = {Version: 1.7.6},
  url = {http://cran.r-project.org/src/contrib/Descriptions/cluster.html},
}

@phdthesis{sanner:TEA-1997,
  author = {Leif Sanner},
  title = {Turst between Enterpreneurs and External Actors.
                   Sensemaking in Organising New Business Ventures},
  school = {Uppsala University},
  year = {1997},
  address = {Uppsala, Sweden},
}

@book{sayrs:PTS-1989,
  title = {Pooled Time Series Analysis},
  publisher = {Sage Publications},
  year = {1989},
  author = {Sayrs, Lois W.},
  number = {07-070},
  series = {Sage university papers series. Quantitative applications in the
social sciences},
  address = {Newbury Park, CA},
}

@article{sears:JPSP-1986-515,
  author = {David O. Sears},
  title = {College Sophmores in the Laboratory: Influences of a
                   Narrow Data Base on Psychology's View of Human Nature.},
  journal = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology},
  year = {1986},
  volume = {51},
  pages = {515--530},
}

@techreport{serageldin:IDM-1998-1,
  author = {Ismail Serageldin and others},
  title = {The Initiative on Defining, Monitoring and Measuring
                   Social Capital},
  institution = {Social Capital Initiative},
  year = {1998},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {1},
  address = {Washington, D.C.},
  month = apr,
  annote = {proposal for further research},
}

@book{skogan:CPC-1997,
  title = {Community Policing {C}hicago Style},
  publisher = pub-oup,
  year = {1997},
  author = {Wesley G. Skogan and Susan M. Hartnett},
  annote = {2BFOUND},
  isbn = {0-19-513633-0},
}

@book{slemrod:WPT-1992,
  title = {Why people pay taxes: tax compliance and enforcement},
  publisher = {University of Michigan Press},
  year = {1992},
  author = {Joel Slemrod},
  address = {Ann Arbor, MI},
  lccn = {HJ4653.E75 W45},
}

@book{soto:MOC-2000,
  title = {The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the
                   West and Fails Everywhere Else},
  publisher = pub-bab,
  year = {2000},
  author = {Hernando de Soto},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {HB501 S778},
  annote = {2BFINISHED see
                   2003/skola/dissertation/podklady/bibs/soto_MOC-2000.txt},
  isbn = {0-465-01614-6},
}

@book{spain:WSC-2000,
  title = {How Women Saved the City},
  publisher = {University of Minnesota Press},
  year = {2000},
  author = {Daphne Spain},
  address = {Minneapolis},
  lccn = {HQ1420.S64},
  isbn = {0-8166-3531-5},
}

@book{stack:AOK-1974,
  title = {All Our Kin: Strategies for Survival in a Black
                   Community},
  publisher = {Harper \& Row},
  year = {1974},
  author = {Carol Stack},
  address = {New York},
}

@incollection{steenbergen:WPP-1992-9,
  author = {Steenbergen, Marco R. and McGraw, Kathleen M. and
                   Scholz, John T.},
  title = {Taxpayer Adaptation to the 1986 Tax Reform Act: Do New
                   Tax Laws Affect the Way Taxpayers Think About Taxes?},
  booktitle = {Why People Pay Taxes},
  year = {1992},
  editor = {Slemrod, Joel},
  pages = {9-30},
}

@book{stone:PPA-1988,
  title = {Policy Paradox: the art of political decision making},
  publisher = pub-wwnc,
  year = {1988},
  author = {Deborah Stone},
  lccn = {H97.S83},
  isbn = {0-395-96857-X},
}

@book{sunstein:RDC-2001,
  title = {republic.com},
  publisher = pub-pup,
  year = {2001},
  author = {Cass Sunstein},
  address = addr-pox,
  lccn = {HM851 .S87},
  annote = {The main of the book is clear: Internet allows much
                   bigger isolation of personal experiences and thus hurts
                   republican process of deliberative democracy, which is
                   based in author's opinion in people meeting unintended
                   or even undesired ideas. When people can filter all
                   ideas which they don't like, they do not have to
                   participate in any real discussion. Moreover,
                   compartelisation of experience can lead to more
                   extremist views, because of ``enclave deliberation''
                   effect. Interesting distinction in free-speach dissents
                   of justices Brandeis and Holmes (both proponents of
                   free speach): whereas Holmes favored ``free market of
                   ideas'' (Abrams v. US, 250 US 616, 635), Brandeis
                   (Whitney v. California, 274 US 357, 372) was concerned
                   with ``inert people'' and saw discussion as ``political
                   duty''. Free market of ideas is dangerous concept,
                   because consumers' sovereignity is not political
                   sovereignity, where people should decide by discussion
                   even opinions, they do not want. {my note} Problems
                   with a discussion on Internet: the basic question (not
                   asked by the author) is ``Why diverse groups of people
                   makes an agreement at all?'' Maybe, that the answer is
                   that they are under pressure (not only interpersonal,
                   but by circumstances too) to make some (or any)
                   decission. Participants of lyx-devel must decide on
                   some technical issue, because more important for them
                   is further development of LyX, than their personal idea
                   (BTW, this hierarchy of importance may be very
                   interesting). Participants in town meeting (or board
                   meeting) want to make some decision and go home (and
                   again, further development of town or company is more
                   important than their personal preferences). No such
                   thing exists in comp.os.linux.advocacy or
                   soc.religion.christian -- you do not have to make any
                   conclusion at all, you have endless time to spare
                   (discussion may occur in disjunctive time), there is
                   nothing more important than your opinion (actually,
                   there is nothing important at all), etc. WHAT MAKES
                   PEOPLE TO AGREE IN ROXBURY (or NEWTON)?},
  isbn = {0-691-09589-2},
}

@techreport{sunstein:PLLTWP-2002-28,
  author = {Cass R. Sunstein},
  title = {Interpretation and Institutions},
  institution = {The University of Chicago Law School},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {28},
  month = jul,
  annote = {Similar to \ref{sunstein:PLLTWP-2002-33}: nice,
                   interesting, but totally unrelated to the issue I am
                   interested in. The paper defends using institutional
                   approach in interpretation theory -- basically taking
                   into consideration limitations of those who interpret
                   law and not to work with idealized model of wise elder
                   judge compared to always mistaken legislature.},
  url = {http://www.law.uchicago.edu/academics/publiclaw/resources/28.crs-av.int
erpretation.pdf},
}

@techreport{sunstein:PLLTWP-2002-33,
  author = {Cass R. Sunstein},
  title = {Hazardous Heuristics},
  institution = {The University of Chicago Law School},
  year = {2002},
  type = {Working Paper},
  number = {33},
  month = nov,
  annote = {No use for me -- risk assesment strategies (too much
                   microlevel). People use heuristic algorythms with
                   systematic (and thus predictable) errors instead of
                   thorough decision-making.},
  url = {http://www.law.uchicago.edu/academics/publiclaw/resources/33.crs.hazard
ous.pdf},
}

@article{sunstein:CALR-1995-953,
  author = {Cass R. Sunstein},
  title = {Problems with Rules},
  journal = {California Law Review},
  year = {1995},
  volume = {83},
  pages = {953-??},
  note = {Sem zadejte text},
}

@book{sztompka:SSS-1999,
  title = {Trust: {A} Sociological Theory},
  publisher = pub-cup,
  year = {1999},
  author = {Piotr Sztompka},
  address = addr-cuk,
  annote = {see 2001/clanky/putnam/sztompka.lyx; 2BFOUND},
  isbn = {0521598508},
}

@book{tannenbaum:CAC-1938,
  title = {Crime and the Community},
  publisher = pub-coup,
  year = {1938},
  author = {Tannenbaum, Frank},
  address = addr-ny,
}

@book{rdev:RAE-2003,
  title = {R: {A} language and environment for statistical
                   computing},
  publisher = {R Foundation for Statistical Computing},
  year = {2003},
  author = {{R Development Core Team}},
  address = {Vienna, Austria},
  isbn = {3-900051-00-3},
}

@article{telec:PRR-1997-179,
  author = {Ivan Telec},
  title = {Sireni del a vykonu v telekomunikacnich sitich,
                   zvlaste v Internetu [Distribution of works and
                   performances in telecommunication networks, especially
                   over the Internet]},
  journal = {Legal Review, [orig. Pravni rozhledy]},
  year = {1997},
  volume = {4},
  pages = {179--182},
}

@book{telec:AZK-1997,
  title = {Autorsky zakon --- komentar},
  publisher = {C. H. Beck},
  year = {1997},
  author = {Ivo Telec},
  address = {Praha},
  edition = {1.},
}

@unpublished{thacher:CIH-2003,
  author = {David Thacher},
  title = {City Interests and Homeland Security in Deaborn,
                   Michigan},
  year = {2003},
  journal = {unpublished -- presented in LSA meeting},
  institution = {Gerard R. Ford School of Public Policy, The University
                   of Michigan},
  address = {Pittsburgh, PA},
  email = {dthacher<at>umich.edu},
}

@book{thomas:UAG-1923,
  title = {The Unadjusted Girl with cases and standpoint for behavior analysis},
  publisher = pub-lb,
  year = {1923},
  author = {Thomas, W. I.},
  address = addr-bom,
}

@book{titmuss:GRH-1971,
  title = {The Gift Relationship: From Human Blood to Social
                   Policy},
  year = {1971},
  author = {Richard M. Titmuss},
  note = {Is it article, book, or what?},
  annote = {2BREAD Finding that incentives suppress donation of
                   blood.},
}

@book{tocqueville:DIA-1848,
  title = {Democracy in America [Demokracie v Americe]},
  publisher = {Lidove noviny},
  year = {1992},
  author = {Alexis de Tocqueville},
  address = addr-prg,
  note = {Czech translation of edition from 1848},
}

@article{tonry:UCLR-1999-1751,
  author = {Michael Tonry},
  title = {Symposium: Rethinking Unthinkable Punishment Policies
                   in America},
  journal = {UCLA Law Review},
  year = {1999},
  volume = {46},
  pages = {1751--???},
  annote = {Criticism of some modern policing strategies,
                   including Kahan's shaming strategy. However, this
                   criticism is used only for illustration of the main
                   author's intention, which is to describe current
                   American criminal policy as a product of moral panic.
                   Historical part of the paper describes three waves of
                   ``war on drugs'' (pre-Civil War and post-First World
                   War prohibitions, and 1980s War on Drugs), which are
                   usually used as a tool of marginalization of new
                   minority by the intention. Historical part of the paper
                   describes three waves of draconical ``war on drugs''
                   (pre-Civil War and post-First World War prohibitions,
                   and 1980s War on Drugs), which are usually used as a
                   tool of marginalization of new minority by the
                   xenophobic majority (be the minority Germans, Irish, or
                   Italian immigrants, or now Black community) majority
                   (be the minority Germans, Irish, or Italian immigrants,
                   or now Black community), which labelled as evil bearer
                   of the prohibited drug.},
}

@techreport{trulear:FIY-2000,
  author = {Harold Dean Trulear},
  title = {Faith-Based Institutions and High-Risk Youth},
  institution = {Public/Private Ventures},
  year = {2000},
  type = {\ },
  month = {Spring},
  url = {http://www.ppv.org/content/reports/faithhighrisk.html},
}

@article{tyler:BLR-2001-361,
  author = {Tom R. Tyler},
  title = {Trust and Law Abidingness: {A} Proactive Model of
                   Social Regulation},
  journal = j-blr,
  year = {2001},
  volume = {81},
  pages = {361--???},
  annote = {2BREAD 367-9: maintaining control of potentially
                   dangerous situations as means of self-protection.; also
                   376-78, 385-86},
}

@book{tyler:SJD-1997,
  title = {Social Justice In a Diverse Society},
  publisher = {WestviewPress},
  year = {1997},
  author = {Tom R. Tyler},
  address = {Boulder, Co.},
  lccn = {HM216.S553},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0-813-33214-1},
}

@book{tyler:WPO-1990,
  title = {Why People Obey the Law},
  publisher = pub-yup,
  year = {1990},
  author = {Tom R. Tyler},
  address = addr-nhnh,
  lccn = {K250.T95 1990},
  annote = {Problem with the first chapter seems to lie in
                   non-answering the question in the title of the book. It
                   doesn't say, \emph{why} people obey the law, but merely
                   describes feeling of people that the law is to be
                   obeyed and classifies different aspects of such feeling
                   (legitimacy, acccepting authority, morality, etc.).
           page 47 (bottom): Education is also related to
                   legitimacy, with highly educated respondents
                   less likely to evince high levels of
                   legitimacy. [!!! The same is on page 56,
                   third para.]},
  isbn = {0-300-04403-8},
}

@book{tyler:TIL-2002,
  title = {Trust in the Law: Encouraging Public Cooperation with
                   the Police and Courts},
  publisher = {Russell Sage Foundation},
  year = {2002},
  author = {Tom R. Tyler and Yuen J. Huo},
  address = {New York, NY},
  month = oct,
  pages = {296},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0-87154-889-5},
}

@book{venables:MAS-2002,
  title = {Modern {A}pplied {S}tatistics with {S}},
  publisher = pub-spv,
  year = {2002},
  author = {William N. Venables and Brian D. Ripley},
  series = {Statistics and Computing},
  address = addr-ny,
  edition = {4th},
}

@book{vencovsky:DBC-1999,
  title = {Dejiny bankovnictvi v ceskych zemich [The history of
                   banking in the Czech lands]},
  publisher = {Bankovni institut},
  year = {1999},
  author = {Frantisek Vencovsky and Zdenek Jindra and others},
  address = addr-prg,
}

@article{waldman:HLJ-1997-703,
  author = {Ellen Waldman},
  title = {Identifying the Role of Social Norms in Mediation: {A}
                   Multiple Model Approach},
  journal = j-hlj,
  year = {1997},
  volume = {48},
  pages = {703--???},
  annote = {2BREAD alternative dispute resolution},
}

@techreport{wallace:SSI-1997,
  author = {Claire Wallace and Vasil Bedzer and Oksana Chmonliar},
  title = {Spending, Saving, or Investing Social Capital: The
                   Case of Shuttle Traders in Post-Communist Central
                   Europe},
  institution = {Institut for Advanced Studies},
  year = {1997},
  type = {East European Series},
  number = {43},
  address = {Vienna, Austria},
  month = jun,
}

@book{warner:SSU-1982,
  title = {Streetcar Suburbs},
  publisher = pub-hup,
  year = {1982},
  author = {Sam Bass Jr. Warner},
  address = addr-cam,
  lccn = {HN80.B7 W3},
  isbn = {0-674-84211-1},
}

@article{wassom:CWR-1998-181,
  author = {Brian D. Wassom},
  title = {Copyright Implications of ``Unconventional Linking''
                   on the World Wide Web: Framing, Deep Linking and
                   Inlining},
  journal = j-cwrlr,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {49},
  number = {1},
  pages = {181--256},
}

@book{watson:LOC-2000,
  title = {Law Out of Context},
  publisher = {University of Georgia Press},
  year = {2000},
  author = {Alan Watson},
  address = {Athens, GA},
  lccn = {K370.W367},
  annote = {Available only in special file review-of-textbooks.},
  isbn = {0-8203-2161-3},
}

@book{weber:PES-1904,
  title = {The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism},
  year = {1904},
  author = {Max Weber},
  url =
{http://www.ne.jp/asahi/moriyuki/abukuma/weber/world/ethic/pro_eth_frame.html},
}

@book{weiss:LFS-1994,
  title = {Learning from Strangers: The Art and Method of
                   Qualitative Interview Studies},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1994},
  author = {Rober S. Weiss},
  address = {New York},
  lccn = {HN29.W42},
  annote = {A very good explanation of the interviewing. Author
                   explain both techniques of interviewing as well as
                   methodology of preparation, analysis and reporting on
                   the interviewing research.},
  isbn = {0-02-934625-8},
}

@book{wilkerson:ZDK-1992,
  title = {Zacalo to dykou a krizem},
  publisher = {Krestansky zivot},
  year = {1992},
  author = {David Wilkerson},
  address = {Albrechtice},
}

@book{williamson:EIC-1985,
  title = {The Economic Institutions of Capitalism},
  publisher = pub-fp,
  year = {1985},
  author = {Olivier E. Williamson},
  address = addr-ny,
  edition = {First},
  annote = {Basic introduction to the transactional cost
                   economics.},
}

@article{wilson:ATM-1982-29,
  author = {James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling},
  title = {Broken Windows},
  journal = j-atm,
  year = {1982},
  volume = {249},
  number = {3},
  pages = {29--38},
  url =
{http://www.manhattan-institute.org/pdf/_atlantic_monthly-broken_windows.pdf},
  month = mar,
  annote = {2BREAD neudelal jsem si poznamky!},
}

@techreport{winship:EOM-2002,
  author = {Christopher Winship},
  title = {End of a Miracle?: Crime, Faith, and Partnership in
                   {B}oston in the 1990's},
  institution = {Harvard University},
  year = {2002},
  month = mar,
  annote = {Author is sceptical in miracle being just matter of
                   number of dead; it seems that if there was a miracle,
                   it was in good relationships kept during crime decline
                   (cf. NYC). Anyway, the miracle is now under stress
                   because of rising crime (apparently criminals returning
                   from jails). Meanwhile, author presents longer-time
                   graph of homicide rate for Boston (1950-1998), which
                   clearly indicates that the level of homicide rate of
                   1998 (6 per 100,000) was lowest since 1962 and that
                   since 1970 standard level of crime was approx. 15 per
                   100k.},
  url = {http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/soc/faculty/winship/End_of_a_Miracle.pdf},
}

@article{woolcock:TAS-1998-151,
  author = {M. Woolcock},
  title = {Social capital and economic development: Toward a
                   theoretical synthesis and policy framework},
  journal = j-tas,
  year = {1998},
  volume = {27},
  number = {2},
  pages = {151--208},
}

@book{wuebben:ESO-1974,
  title = {The Experiment as a Social Occasion},
  publisher = {Glendessary Press},
  year = {1974},
  author = {Paul L. Wuebben and Bruce C. Straits and Gary I.
                   Schulman},
  address = {Berkeley, CA},
  pages = {330},
  lccn = {H62 .W76},
  annote = {2BREAD Soubor otazek z metodologie socialni
                   psychologie. Predmetem vzkumu je ``social interaction
                   which accompanies, and takes place, during, the
                   execution of an experiment in the social sciences''.},
  isbn = {0-87709-720-8},
}

@book{yin:CSR-1989,
  title = {Case study research: {D}esign and {M}ethods},
  publisher = pub-sag,
  year = {1989},
  author = {Yin, R. K.},
  address = addr-nbp-ca,
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@techreport{zak:CNS-1998,
  author = {Zak, Paul J. and Knack, Stephen},
  title = {Trust and Growth},
  institution = {Center for Neuroeconomic Studies and World
                   Bank---Development Economics Research Group},
  year = {1998},
  type = {Working paper},
  address = {Claremont, CA and Washington, DC},
  month = sep,
  url = {http://ssrn.com/abstract=136961},
}

@book{zakaria:FOF-2003,
  title = {The Future of Freedom: Illiberal Democracy at Home and
                   Abroad},
  publisher = pub-wwnc,
  year = {2003},
  author = {Fareed Zakaria},
  address = addr-ny,
  edition = {1st},
  pages = {256},
  isbn = {0-393-04764-4},
}

@article{zakaria:FAF-1997-11,
  author = {Fareed Zakaria},
  title = {The Rise of Illiberal Democracy},
  journal = {Foreign Affairs},
  year = {1997},
  month = dec,
}

@article{zoba:CHT-2001-132-14,
  author = {Wendy Murray Zoba},
  title = {Separated and Equal},
  journal = {Christianity Today},
  year = {1996},
  pages = {14--24},
  month = {2},
  day = {5},
  url = {http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2001/132/24.0.html},
}

@book{zoulik:OZP-1992,
  title = {Obcansky zakonik --- uplne zneni zakona s poznamkami
                   pro pravni a podnikatelskou praxi},
  publisher = {Trizonia},
  year = {1992},
  author = {Frantisek Zoulik},
  address = {Praha},
  edition = {1.},
}

@misc{stallman:WFS-1999,
  author = {Richard {M}. {S}tallman},
  title = {Why `{F}ree {S}oftware' is better than `{O}pen
                   {S}ource'},
  month = nov,
  year = {1999},
  url = {http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-software-for-freedom.html},
}

@misc{stallman:GNM-1982,
  author = {Richard {M}. {S}tallman},
  title = {{GNU} {M}anifesto},
  year = {1982-93},
  url = {http://www.gnu.org/gnu/manifesto.html},
}

@proceedings{bane:WWP-2000,
  title = {Who Will Provide?: The Changing Role of Religion in
                   American Social Welfare},
  year = {2000},
  editor = {Mary Jo Bane and Brent Coffin},
  address = {Boulder, CO},
  publisher = {Westview Press},
  organization = {Harvard Divinity School},
  lccn = {HV91.W497},
  annote = {Quite interesting collection on papers on the relation
                   between charity and separation of church and state.},
  isbn = {0-8133-3876-X},
}

@book{blumstein:CDA-2000,
  title = {The {C}rime {D}rop in {A}merica},
  publisher = pub-cup,
  year = {2000},
  editor = {Alfred Blumstein and Joel Wallman},
  address = addr-cuk,
  edition = {First},
  booktitle = {The {C}rime {D}rop in {A}merica},
}

@book{breit:LNL-1995,
  publisher = pub-mit,
  year = {1995},
  editor = {William Breit and Roger Spencer},
  address = addr-cam,
  edition = {3rd},
  booktitle = {Lives of the Nobel Laurerates: Thirteen Nobel
                   Economists},
}

@book{drobak:FNI-1997,
  publisher = pub-ap,
  year = {1997},
  editor = {John N. Drobak and John V. C. Nye},
  address = addr-sd,
  booktitle = {The Frontiers of the New Institutional Economics},
}

@book{eberly:ECS-2000,
  publisher = {Rowran \& Littlefield},
  editor = {Eberly, D. E.},
  address = {Oxford, UK},
  page = {Text},
}

@book{gambetta:TMB-1988,
  publisher = pub-bb,
  year = {1988},
  editor = {Diego Gambetta},
  address = addr-ony,
  note = {Proceedings of the series of seminars from 1985-6,
                   King's College, Cambridge},
  url = {http://www.sociology.ox.ac.uk/trustbook.html},
  booktitle = {Trust: Making and Breaking Cooperative Relations},
}

@book{gintis:MSO-2005,
  title = {The Moral Sentiments: Origins, Evidence, and Polic},
  publisher = pub-mit,
  year = {2005},
  editor = {Gintis, Herbert and Bowles, Samuel and Boyd, Robert and Fehr,
Ernst},
  address = addr-cam,
  month = jan,
  pages = {416},
  booktitle = {The Moral Sentiments: Origins, Evidence, and Polic},
  isbn = {262072521},
}

@book{kegel:HEE-1995,
  title = {The Handbook of Experimental Economics},
  year = {1995},
  editor = {John H. Kegel and Alvin E. Roth},
  annote = {2BREAD esp. 111, 139f},
}

@book{kiel:CTS-1997,
  title = {Chaos Theory in the Social Science},
  publisher = {University of Michigan Press},
  year = {1997},
  editor = {L. Douglas Kiel and Euel W. Elliott},
  address = {Ann Arbor, MI},
  pages = {345},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0-472-08472-0},
}

@book{ostrom:TAR-2003,
  title = {Trust and {R}eciprocity: Interdisciplinary Lessons from Experimental
Research},
  publisher = pub-rsf,
  year = {2003},
  editor = {Elinor Ostrom and James Walker},
  pages = {400},
  isbn = {0-87154-647-7},
}

@book{parijs:WFL-2001,
  title = {What's wrong with a free lunch?},
  publisher = pub-bp,
  year = {2001},
  editor = {Philippe van Parijs and Joshua Cohen and Joel Rogers},
  address = addr-bom,
  note = {POCHYBNE - asi vice o welfare},
  lccn = {HC79.I5 W49},
  annote = {2BREAD Diskuse o navrhu Universal Basic Income --
                   government should pay a fixed monthly amount, the same
                   for everyone, to each citizen (or resident) older than
                   16 years (or whatever age).},
}

@book{pattillo:IAT-2004,
  title = {Imprisoning America: the social effects of mass
                   incarceration},
  publisher = pub-sag,
  year = {2004},
  editor = {Pattilo, Mary and Weiman, David and Western, Bruce},
  address = addr-ny,
  lccn = {HV8705.I455},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0871546523},
}

@book{ragin:FSS-2000,
  title = {Fuzzy-Set Social Science},
  publisher = pub-ucp,
  year = {2000},
  editor = {Charles Ragin},
  address = addr-chi,
  abstract = {In this innovative approach to the
     practice of social science, Charles Ragin explores the use of fuzzy sets
     to bridge the divide between quantitative and qualitative methods.
     Paradoxically, the fuzzy set is a powerful tool because it replaces an
     unwieldy, ``fuzzy'' instrument (the variable, which establishes only the
     positions of cases relative to each other) with a precise one (degree
     of membership in a well-defined set). Ragin argues that fuzzy sets
     allow a far richer dialogue between ideas and evidence in social
     research than previously possible. They let quantitative researchers
     abandon ``homogenizing assumptions'' about cases and causes, they
     extend diversity-oriented research strategies, and they provide a
     powerful connection between theory and data analysis. Most important,
     fuzzy sets can be carefully tailored to fit evolving theoretical
     concepts, sharpening analytical tools with in-depth knowledge gained
     through case-oriented inquiry. This book will revolutionize research
     methods not only in sociology, political science, and anthropology
     but in any field of inquiry dealing with complex patterns of social
     causation.},
  annote = {2BREAD},
}

@book{rotberg:PSC-2000,
  title = {Patterns of Social Capital},
  publisher = pub-cup,
  year = {2000},
  editor = {Robert J. Rotberg},
  address = addr-cuk,
  annote = {2BREAD Soubor _historickch_ esej o Social Capital
                   ruzne po svete vetsinou z Italie, Francie, UK, US od
                   stredoveku. TOTO JE HISTORICKA KNIHA!},
}

@book{sistare:GGR-2001,
  title = {Groups and group rights},
  publisher = {University Press of Kansas},
  year = {2001},
  editor = {C[hristine] T. Sistare and Larry May and Leslie
                   Francis},
  address = {Lawrence, KA},
  note = {zajimave, ale asi trochu mimo},
  lccn = {HM711 .G76},
  annote = {2BREAD Sociology of groups used in the development of
                   the concept of group rights.},
}

@book{skogan:FEP-2004,
  title = {Fairness and Effectiveness in Policing : the Evidence},
  publisher = {National Academies Press},
  year = {2004},
  editor = {Skogan, Wesley and Frydl, Kathleen},
  address = addr-wdc,
  note = {National Research Council (U.S.). Committee to Review
                   Research on Police Policy and Practices and Committee
                   on Law and Justice.},
  lccn = {HV8138 .F35},
  annote = {2BREAD},
  isbn = {0309084334},
}

@book{tomasic:NEJ-1982,
  title = {Neighborhood Justice},
  publisher = {Longman},
  year = {1982},
  editor = {Roman Tomasic and Malcolm M. Feely},
  address = {New York \& London},
  lccn = {KF9084.A75 N45},
  booktitle = {Neighborhood Justice},
  isbn = {0-582-28253-5},
}

@book{vecernik:ZVC-1998,
  title = {Zprava o vyvoji ceske spolecnosti 1989--1998 [Report
                   on the development of the Czech society 1989--1998]},
  publisher = pub-ac,
  year = {1998},
  editor = {Jiri Vecernik and Petr Mateju},
  address = addr-prg,
  edition = {First},
}

@misc{wikipedia-2003,
  title = {Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia},
  year = {2003},
  key = {Wikipedia},
  url = {http://www.wikipedia.org},
}

@book{oreilly:OSV-1999,
  publisher = pub-ora,
  year = {1999},
  edition = {1st},
  annote = {cited from on-line version},
  booktitle = {Open Sources: Voices from the Open Source Revolution},
}

@manual{idc:MSS-1998,
  title = {Market survey of server operating systems in 1998},
  organization = {Int. Data Corp.},
  year = {1998},
  url = {http://www.sunworld.com/swol-04-1999/swol-04-idclinux.html},
}

@manual{uncitral:CISG-1991,
  title = {{UN} Convention on the International Sale of Goods},
  organization = {UNCITRAL},
  edition = {notice of the {Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs},
                   no. 160/1991 {Coll.}},
  year = {1991},
  url = {http://www.uncitral.org/english/texts/sales/salescon.htm},
}

@misc{povertynet,
  title = {Poverty{N}et},
  url = {http://www.worldbank.org/poverty/},
}

@unpublished{cepl:HBB-2003,
  author = matej,
  title = {Boston Community Segregation: How Bad is a Bad?},
  note = {Presented at Law \& Society Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, 2003},
  month = may,
  year = {2003},
  day = {30},
  url = {http://www.ceplovi.cz/matej/clanky/LSA2003-article.pdf}
}

@incollection{meltzer:SIR-1972-15,
  author = {Meltzer, Bernard N.},
  editor = {Manis, Jerome G. and Meltzer, Bernard},
  title = {Mead's Social Psychology},
  booktitle = {Symbolic Interaction: A Reader in Social Psychology},
  year = {1972},
  publisher = pub-abl,
  address = addr-bom,
  pages = {15-??}
}

@incollection{berrien:SOC-2002,
  author = {Winship, Christopher},
  title = {An Umbrella of Legitimacy: Boston's Police
        Department-Ten Point Coalition Collaboration},
  booktitle = {Securing Our Children's Future},
  publisher = {Brookings Institute Press},
  address = addr-wdc,
  editor = {Katzman, Gary S.},
  year = {2002},
  ISBN = {0-8157-0605-7},
  LCCN = {HV9104.S37},
  url = {http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/soc/faculty/winship/umbrella2003.pdf}
}

@book{debotton:SAN-2004,
  title = {Status anxiety},
  publisher = {Pantheon Books},
  year = {2004},
  author = {De Botton, Alain},
  address = addr-ny,
  edition = {1st},
  pages = {306},
  subject = {Social status -- Psychological aspects},
  isbn = {0-375-42083-5},
  lccn = {HM821 .D43},
  annote = {The book presents one dark part of otherwise
    glamorous world of the modern society. Comparing pre-modern
    and modern society, the author shows how democratization of
    the society through modernism and destruction of the
    traditional hierarchical society created a modern world of
    status anxiety, because people instead of having fixed place
    in the society which explicitly did not correspond with one's
    abilities or qualities, meritocratic society now explicitly
    claims that people position in the life is given only through
    their qualities which are supposedly perfectly found through
    the market and democratic techniques.}
}

@book{altheide:QMA-1996,
    author = "Altheide, David L.",
    title = "Qualitative Media Analysis",
    publisher = "Sage Publications, Inc.",
    address = addr-to,
    year = 1996,
    ISBN = "0-7619-0198-1",
    LCCN = "P91.3.A48",
    edition = "first",
    series = "A Sage University Paper",
    pages = 87}

@article{sherman:JRC-1993-445,
  author = {Sherman, Lawrence},
  title = {Defiance, deterrence, and irrelevance: A theory of the
           criminal sanction},
  journal = j-jrcd,
  year = {1993},
  pages = {445-473}
}

@book{schutz:PSW-1967,
    author = "Shutz, A.",
    title = "The phenomenology of the social world",
    note = "(G. Walsh \& F. Lenhert, (trans.))",
    publisher = "Northwestern University Press",
    address = "Evanston, Il.",
    year = 1967
}

@book{strauss:BQR-1998,
    author = "Strauss, Anselm and Corbin, Juliet",
    title = "Basics of Qualitative Research",
    publisher = pub-sag,
    edition = {Second},
    address = addr-to,
    year = 1998,
    ISBN = {0-8039-5939-7},
    LCCN = {HA29.S823},
    pages = 312
}

@book{glasser:DGT-1967,
    author = "Glasser, B. and Strauss, A[nselm]",
    title = "The discovery of grounded theory",
    publisher = "Aldine",
    address = "Chicago, Il.",
    year = 1967
}

@book{carey:CAC-1989,
  author = "Carey, James W.",
  title = "Communication as culture: essays on media and society",
  publisher = "Unwin Hyman, Inc.",
  year = "1989",
  ISBN = "0-04-445062-1",
  LCCN = "P91.C33",
  series = "media and popular culture",
  number = 1
}

@book{creswell:RDA-1994,
  author = "Creswell, John W.",
  title = "Research Design: Qualitative \& Quantitative
      Approaches",
  publisher = pub-sag,
  address = addr-to,
  year = 1994,
  ISBN = "0-8039-5255-4",
  LCCN = "H62.C6963",
  pages = 228
}

@article{haydu:AJS-1998-339,
  author = {Haydum Jeffrey},
  title = {Making Use of the Past: Time Periods as Cases to Compare and a
Sequences of Problem being},
  journal = j-amjss,
  year = {1997},
  pages = {21},
}

@article{jeffrey:AMJ-1997-21,
  author = {Haydum Jeffrey},
  title = {Making Use of the Past: Time Periods as Cases to Compare and a
Sequces of Problem being, Is therebody NONSENSE},
  journal = j-amjss,
  year = {1997},
  pages = {21},
}

@article{jeffrey:JPP-1997-26,
  author = {Haydum Jeffrey},
  title = {To Belong or Not to Belong. That Is Te Tetrror Managementu},
  journal = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology},
  year = {1997},
  volume = {83},
  number = {15},
  pages = {26-39},
}

@article{matsueda:ASR-1982-489,
  author = {Matsueda, R[oss L.]},
  title = {Testing Control Theory and Differential Association: A Causal
Modeling Approach},
  journal = j-asr,
  year = {1982},
  volume = {47},
  number = {4},
  month = {August},
  pages = {489-504},
}

@article{greenberg:JESP-1993-229,
  author = {Jeff Greenberg and Sheldon Solomon and Tom Pyszczynski
                   and Abram Rosenblatt and John Burling and Deborah Lyon
                   and Linda Simon and Elizabeth Pinel},
  title = {Why Do People Need Self-Esteem? Converging Evidence That Self-Esteem
           an Anxiety-Buffering Function},
  journal = j-jpsp,
  year = {1992},
  volume = {63},
  number = {6},
  pages = {913-922},
}

@article{robinson:SSR-30-117,
  author = {Robert V. Robinson and Elton F. Jackson},
  title = {Is Trust in Others Declining in America? An Age-Period-Cohort
Analysis},
  journal = {Social Science Research},
  year = {2001},
  volume = {30},
  pages = {117-143},
}

@article{fukuyama:BLR-2001-479,
  author = {Fukuyama, Francis},
  title = {Symposium Trust Relationships Part 2 of 2: Differing Disciplinary
Perspectives on the Origins of Trust},
  journal = j-blr,
  year = {2001},
  volume = {81},
  pages = {479-494},
}

@article{russell:BLR-2001-495,
  author = {Hardin, Russell},
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